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Unsettling the Coloniality of Being/Power/Truth/Freedom:

Towards the Human, After Man, Its Overrepresentation--An


Argument

Sylvia Wynter

CR: The New Centennial Review, Volume 3, Number 3, Fall 2003, pp. 257-337
(Article)

Published by Michigan State University Press


DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/ncr.2004.0015

For additional information about this article


https://muse.jhu.edu/article/51630

Access provided by University of Melbourne (24 Jul 2017 02:35 GMT)


Unsettling the Coloniality
of Being/Power/Truth/Freedom
Towards the Human, After Man,
Its Overrepresentation—An Argument

SY LVI A W Y N T E R
Stanford University

INTRODUCTION
Guide-Quotes 1

One thing in any case is certain: man is neither the oldest nor the most con-
stant problem that has been posed for human knowledge. Taking a relatively
short chronological sample within a restricted geographical area—European
culture since the sixteenth century—one can be certain that man is a recent
invention within it. . . . In fact, among all the mutations that have affected
the knowledge of things and their order, the . . . only one, that which began
a century and a half ago and is now perhaps drawing to a close, has made it
possible for the figure of man to appear. And that appearance . . . was the
effect of a change in the fundamental arrangements of knowledge. . . . If
those arrangements were to disappear as they appeared . . . one can certainly
wager that man would be erased.
—Michel Foucault, The Order of Things: An Archaeology of The Human Sciences

● 257
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The reality in highly indebted countries is grim. Half of Africa’s population—


about 300 million people—live without access to basic healthcare or a safe
water source. In Tanzania, where 40 percent of the population dies before
age 35, the government spends nine times more on foreign debt payments
than on healthcare. In 1997, before Hurricane Mitch, Nicaragua spent more
than half its revenue on debt payments. Until recently, it has taken countries
in structural adjustment programs six or more years to get debt relief. For
lenders this seems like common sense—making sure the country has its eco-
nomic house in order before canceling debts—but the human cost is tremen-
dous. Six years is a child’s entire elementary school education. If
governments are forced to cut subsidies for public education and charge fees
that make schooling too expensive for the poor, it cheats a whole generation
of children.
—Robert W. Edgar, “Jubilee 2000: Paying Our Debts”

Step up to the White House, “Let me in!”


What’s my reason for being? I’m your next of kin,
And we built this motherfucker, you wanna kill me ‘cause o’ my hunger?
. . . I’m just a black man, why y’all made it so hard?
Damn, nigga gotta go create his own job,
Mr. Mayor, imagine this was yo backyard,
Mr. Governor, imagine it’s yo kids that starve,
Imagine yo kids gotta slang crack to survive,
Swing a Mac to be alive, . . .
Extinction of Earth? Human cutdown? . . .
Tax-payers pay for more jails for black and latin faces”
—Nas, “CIA”

Definitions of the intellectual are many and diverse. They have, however, one
trait in common, which makes them also different from all other definitions:
they are all self-definitions. Indeed, their authors are the members of the
same rare species they attempt to define. . . . The specifically intellectual
form of the operation—self-definition—masks its universal content which is
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 259

the reproduction and reinforcement of a given social configuration, and—


with it—a given (or claimed) status for the group.
—Zygmunt Bauman, Legislators and Interpreters:
On Modernity, Post-Modernity and Intellectuals

What is known as the Gregorian reform was actually an effort of modern-


ization initiated and carried out by the Church from about 1050 until 1215
(the year of the Fourth Lateran Council). The reform first of all established
the independence of the Church from secular society. And what better bar-
rier could have been erected between clergy and laity than that of sexuality?
Marriage became the property of lay men and women; virginity, celibacy,
and/or continence became the property of priests, monks, and nuns. A wall
separated the pure from the impure. Impure liquids were banished from the
realm of the pure: the clergy was not allowed to spill sperm or blood and not
permitted to perpetuate original sin through procreation. But in the realm
of the impure the flow was not stanched, only regulated. The Church became
a society of bachelors, which imprisoned lay society in marriage.
—Jacques Le Goff, The Medieval Imagination

The intellectual’s schizoid character stems from the duality of his social exis-
tence; his history is a record of crises of conscience of various kinds, with a
variety of origins. In their ideologies the intellectuals cultivate certain par-
ticular interests until they have universalized them, then turn about and
expose the partiality of those ideologies. . . . They articulate the rules of the
social order and the theories which give them sanction, but at the same time
it is intellectuals who criticize the existing scheme of things and demand its
supersession.
—George Konrad, Ivan Szelenyi, The Intellectuals on the Road to Class Power

Now the highest Father, God the master-builder, . . . took up man . . . and
placing him at the midpoint of the world . . . spoke to him as follows: “We
have given to thee, Adam, no fixed seat, no form of thy very own, no gift
peculiarly thine, that thou mayest feel as thine own, have as thine own, pos-
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sess as thine own the seat, the form, the gifts which thou thyself shalt desire.
A limited nature in other creatures is confined within the laws written down
by Us. In conformity with thy free judgment, in whose hands I have placed
thee, thou art confined by no bounds; and thou wilt fix limits of nature for
thyself. . . . Neither heavenly nor earthly, neither mortal nor immortal have
We made thee. Thou, like a judge appointed for being honorable art the
molder and maker of thyself; thou mayest sculpt thyself into whatever shape
thou dost prefer. Thou canst grow downward into the lower natures which
are brutes. Thou canst again grow upward from thy soul’s reason into the
higher natures which are divine.”
—Pico della Mirandola, Oration on the Dignity of Man

the argument proposes that the struggle of our new millennium will
be one between the ongoing imperative of securing the well-being of our
present ethnoclass (i.e., Western bourgeois) conception of the human, Man,
which overrepresents itself as if it were the human itself, and that of secur-
ing the well-being, and therefore the full cognitive and behavioral autonomy
of the human species itself/ourselves. Because of this overrepresentation,
which is defined in the first part of the title as the Coloniality of Being/
Power/Truth/Freedom, any attempt to unsettle the coloniality of power will
call for the unsettling of this overrepresentation as the second and now
purely secular form of what Aníbal Quijano identifies as the “Racism/
Ethnicism complex,” on whose basis the world of modernity was brought
into existence from the fifteenth/sixteenth centuries onwards (Quijano 1999,
2000),2 and of what Walter Mignolo identifies as the foundational “colonial
difference” on which the world of modernity was to institute itself (Mignolo
1999, 2000).3
The correlated hypothesis here is that all our present struggles with
respect to race, class, gender, sexual orientation, ethnicity, struggles over the
environment, global warming, severe climate change, the sharply unequal
distribution of the earth resources (20 percent of the world’s peoples own 80
percent of its resources, consume two-thirds of its food, and are responsible
for 75 percent of its ongoing pollution, with this leading to two billion of
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 261

earth’s peoples living relatively affluent lives while four billion still live on the
edge of hunger and immiseration, to the dynamic of overconsumption on
the part of the rich techno-industrial North paralleled by that of overpopu-
lation on the part of the dispossessed poor, still partly agrarian worlds of the
South4)—these are all differing facets of the central ethnoclass Man vs.
Human struggle. Central to this struggle also is the usually excluded and
invisibilized situation of the category identified by Zygmunt Bauman as the
“New Poor” (Bauman 1987). That is, as a category defined at the global level
by refugee/economic migrants stranded outside the gates of the rich coun-
tries, as the postcolonial variant of Fanon’s category of les damnés (Fanon
1963)—with this category in the United States coming to comprise the crim-
inalized majority Black and dark-skinned Latino inner-city males now made
to man the rapidly expanding prison-industrial complex, together with their
female peers—the kicked-about Welfare Moms—with both being part of the
ever-expanding global, transracial category of the homeless/the jobless, the
semi-jobless, the criminalized drug-offending prison population. So that if
we see this category of the damnés that is internal to (and interned within)
the prison system of the United States as the analog form of a global archi-
pelago, constituted by the Third- and Fourth-World peoples of the so-called
“underdeveloped” areas of the world—most totally of all by the peoples of
the continent of Africa (now stricken with AIDS, drought, and ongoing civil
wars, and whose bottommost place as the most impoverished of all the
earth’s continents is directly paralleled by the situation of its Black Diaspora
peoples, with Haiti being produced and reproduced as the most impover-
ished nation of the Americas)—a systemic pattern emerges. This pattern is
linked to the fact that while in the post-sixties United States, as Herbert
Gans noted recently, the Black population group, of all the multiple groups
comprising the post-sixties social hierarchy, has once again come to be
placed at the bottommost place of that hierarchy (Gans, 1999), with all
incoming new nonwhite/non-Black groups, as Gans’s fellow sociologist
Andrew Hacker (1992) earlier pointed out, coming to claim “normal” North
American identity by the putting of visible distance between themselves and
the Black population group (in effect, claiming “normal” human status by
distancing themselves from the group that is still made to occupy the nadir,
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“nigger” rung of being human within the terms of our present ethnoclass
Man’s overrepresentation of its “descriptive statement” [Bateson 1969] as if
it were that of the human itself), then the struggle of our times, one that has
hitherto had no name, is the struggle against this overrepresentation. As a
struggle whose first phase, the Argument proposes, was first put in place (if
only for a brief hiatus before being coopted, reterritorialized [Godzich 1986])
by the multiple anticolonial social-protest movements and intellectual chal-
lenges of the period to which we give the name, “The Sixties.”
The further proposal here is that, although the brief hiatus during which
the sixties’ large-scale challenge based on multiple issues, multiple local ter-
rains of struggles (local struggles against, to use Mignolo’s felicitous phrase,
a “global design” [Mignolo 2000]) erupted was soon to be erased, several of
the issues raised then would continue to be articulated, some in sanitized
forms (those pertaining to the category defined by Bauman as “the seduced”),
others in more harshly intensified forms (those pertaining to Bauman’s cate-
gory of the “repressed” [Bauman 1987]). Both forms of “sanitization” would,
however, function in the same manner as the lawlike effects of the post-six-
ties’ vigorous discursive and institutional re-elaboration of the central over-
representation, which enables the interests, reality, and well-being of the
empirical human world to continue to be imperatively subordinated to those
of the now globally hegemonic ethnoclass world of “Man.” This, in the same
way as in an earlier epoch and before what Howard Winant identifies as the
“immense historical rupture” of the “Big Bang” processes that were to lead to
a contemporary modernity defined by the “rise of the West” and the “subju-
gation of the rest of us” (Winant 1994)—before, therefore, the secularizing
intellectual revolution of Renaissance humanism, followed by the decentral-
izing religious heresy of the Protestant Reformation and the rise of the mod-
ern state—the then world of laymen and laywomen, including the institution
of the political state, as well as those of commerce and of economic produc-
tion, had remained subordinated to that of the post-Gregorian Reform
Church of Latin-Christian Europe (Le Goff 1983), and therefore to the “rules
of the social order” and the theories “which gave them sanction” (See Konrad
and Szelenyi guide-quote), as these rules were articulated by its theologians
and implemented by its celibate clergy (See Le Goff guide-quote).
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 263

The Janus face of the emergence of Mignolo’s proposed “modernity/colo-


niality” complementarity is sited here. As also is the answer to the why of the
fact that, as Aníbal Quijano insists in his Qué tal Raza! (2000), the “idea of
race” would come to be “the most efficient instrument of social domination
invented in the last 500 years.” In order for the world of the laity, including
that of the then ascendant modern European state, to escape their subordi-
nation to the world of the Church, it had been enabled to do so only on the
basis of what Michel Foucault identifies as the “invention of Man”: that is, by
the Renaissance humanists’ epochal redescription of the human outside the
terms of the then theocentric, “sinful by nature” conception/ “descriptive
statement” of the human, on whose basis the hegemony of the Church/clergy
over the lay world of Latin-Christian Europe had been supernaturally legiti-
mated (Chorover 1979). While, if this redescription was effected by the lay
world’s invention of Man as the political subject of the state, in the tran-
sumed and reoccupied place of its earlier matrix identity Christian, the per-
formative enactment of this new “descriptive statement” and its master code
of symbolic life and death, as the first secular or “degodded” (if, at the time,
still only partly so) mode of being human in the history of the species, was to
be effected only on the basis of what Quijano identifies as the “coloniality of
power,” Mignolo as the “colonial difference,” and Winant as a huge project
demarcating human differences thinkable as a “racial longue durée.” One of
the major empirical effects of which would be “the rise of Europe” and its
construction of the “world civilization” on the one hand, and, on the other,
African enslavement, Latin American conquest, and Asian subjugation.

PA RT I
The Janus Face of the Invention of “Man”: Laws of Nature
and the Thinkability of Natural, rather than Supernatural Causality
versus the Dynamics of the Colonizer/Colonized Answer
to the Question of Who/What We Are.

This “enormous act of expression/narration” was paradoxical. It was to be


implemented by the West and by its intellectuals as indeed a “Big Bang” process
by which it/they were to initiate the first gradual de-supernaturalizing
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of our modes of being human, by means of its/their re-invention of the theo-


centric “descriptive statement” Christian as that of Man in two forms. The
first was from the Renaissance to the eighteenth century; the second from
then on until today, thereby making possible both the conceptualizability of
natural causality, and of nature as an autonomously functioning force in its
own right governed by its own laws (i.e., cursus solitus naturae) (Hubner
1983; Blumenberg 1983; Hallyn 1990), with this, in turn, making possible the
cognitively emancipatory rise and gradual development of the physical sci-
ences (in the wake of the invention of Man1), and then of the biological sci-
ences (in the wake of the nineteenth century invention of Man2). These were
to be processes made possible only on the basis of the dynamics of a colo-
nizer/colonized relation that the West was to discursively constitute and
empirically institutionalize on the islands of the Caribbean and, later, on the
mainlands of the Americas.
This seeing that if, as Quijano rightly insists, race—unlike gender (which
has a biogenetically determined anatomical differential correlate onto which
each culture’s system of gendered oppositions can be anchored)—is a purely
invented construct that has no such correlate (Quijano 2000), it was this
construct that would enable the now globally expanding West to replace the
earlier mortal/immortal, natural/supernatural, human/the ancestors, the
gods/God distinction as the one on whose basis all human groups had mil-
lennially “grounded” their descriptive statement/prescriptive statements of
what it is to be human, and to reground its secularizing own on a newly pro-
jected human/subhuman distinction instead. That is, on Quijano’s “Racism/
Ethnicism” complex, Winant’s “race concept,” Mignolo’s “colonial difference,”
redefined in the terms of the Spanish state’s theoretical construct of a “by-
nature difference” between Spaniards and the indigenous peoples of the
Americas (Padgen 1982): a difference defined in Ginés de Sepúlveda’s six-
teenth-century terms as almost a difference between “monkeys and men,”
homunculi and true humans. “Race” was therefore to be, in effect, the non-
supernatural but no less extrahuman ground (in the reoccupied place of the
traditional ancestors/gods, God, ground) of the answer that the secularizing
West would now give to the Heideggerian question as to the who, and the
what we are.
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 265

In his 1999 Coloniality Working Group conference presentation, Walter


Mignolo perceptively identified one of the consequences of the “Big Bang”
initiation of the “colonial difference” as that of the fact that, “in the imagi-
nary of the modern/colonial world system sustainable knowledge . . . disre-
garded Amerindian ways of knowing and knowledge production that were
reduced to curious practices of strange people and, in another domain were
demonized.” However, the anthropologist Jacob Pandian (1985) enables us to
see that this epistemological “disregard” was itself part of an even more cen-
tral imperative—that of the sustainability of the new mode of being human,
of its epochal redescription as, primarily, that of the political subject of the
state Man in the transumed and reoccupied place of Latin-Christian
Europe’s founding matrix description, Christian, which had defined the
human as primarily the religious subject of the Church. While, if this new
descriptive statement (one that was to gradually privatize as well as harness
the matrix Christian identity to the realizing of the modern state’s own sec-
ular goals of imperial territorial expansion) was also to be effected on the
basis of a parallel series of discursive and institutional inventions, there was
one that was to be as novel as it was to be central. This, as Pandian docu-
ments, was to be that of the West’s transformation of the indigenous peo-
ples of the Americas/the Caribbean (culturally classified as Indians,
indios/indias), together with the population group of the enslaved peoples
of Africa, transported across the Atlantic (classified as Negroes,
negros/negras) into the physical referents of its reinvention of medieval
Europe’s Untrue Christian Other to its normative True Christian Self, as that
of the Human Other to its new “descriptive statement” of the ostensibly only
normal human, Man.
In his seminal book, Anthropology and the Western Tradition: Towards
an Authentic Anthropology (1985), Jacob Pandian enables us to see that
within the terms of the Judeo-Christian religious creed (within the terms,
therefore, of its variant of the “formulation of a general order of existence,”
correlated “postulate of a significant ill,” and therefore proposed behavior-
motivating “cure” or “plan of salvation” that is defining of all religions
[Girardot 1988]), the physical referents of the conception of the Untrue Other
to the True Christian Self had been the categories of peoples defined in reli-
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gious terminology as heretics, or as Enemies-of-Christ infidels and pagan-


idolaters (with Jews serving as the boundary-transgressive “name of what is
evil” figures, stigmatized as Christ-killing deicides). In the wake of the West’s
reinvention of its True Christian Self in the transumed terms of the Rational
Self of Man1, however, it was to be the peoples of the militarily expropriated
New World territories (i.e., Indians), as well as the enslaved peoples of Black
Africa (i.e., Negroes), that were made to reoccupy the matrix slot of
Otherness—to be made into the physical referent of the idea of the irra-
tional/subrational Human Other, to this first degodded (if still hybridly reli-
gio-secular) “descriptive statement” of the human in history, as the
descriptive statement that would be foundational to modernity.
So that rather than “sustainable knowledge” merely disregarding the
“other ways of knowing” of the Amerindian peoples, as Mignolo contends,
Pandian proposes instead that it was to be the discourses of this knowledge,
including centrally those of anthropology, that would function to construct
all the non-Europeans that encountered (including those whose lands its
settlers expropriated and those whom they enslaved or enserfed) as the
physical referent of, in the first phase, its irrational or subrational Human
Other to its new “descriptive statement” of Man as a political subject. While
the “Indians” were portrayed as the very acme of the savage, irrational Other,
the “Negroes” were assimilated to the former’s category, represented as its
most extreme form and as the ostensible missing link between rational
humans and irrational animals. However, in the wake of the West’s second
wave of imperial expansion, pari passu with its reinvention of in Man now
purely biologized terms, it was to be the peoples of Black African descent
who would be constructed as the ultimate referent of the “racially inferior”
Human Other, with the range of other colonized dark-skinned peoples, all
classified as “natives,” now being assimilated to its category—all of these as
the ostensible embodiment of the non-evolved backward Others—if to vary-
ing degrees and, as such, the negation of the generic “normal humanness,”
ostensibly expressed by and embodied in the peoples of the West.
Nevertheless, if the range of Native Others were now to be classified, as
Pandian further explains, in the terms of the multiple mythologies, of the
savage Other, the fossil Other, the abnormal Other, the timeless ethnographic
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 267

Other, the most salient of all these was to be that of the mythology of the
Black Other of sub-Saharan Africans (and their Diaspora descendants). It is
this population group who would come to be made, several centuries on,
into an indispensable function of the enacting of our present Darwinian
“dysselected by Evolution until proven otherwise” descriptive statement of
the human on the biocentric model of a natural organism. With this popu-
lation group’s systemic stigmatization, social inferiorization, and dynami-
cally produced material deprivation thereby serving both to “verify” the
overrepresentation of Man as if it were the human, and to legitimate the
subordination of the world and well-being of the latter to those of the for-
mer. All of this was done in a lawlike manner through the systemic stigma-
tization of the Earth in terms of its being made of a “vile and base matter,”
a matter ontologically different from that which attested to the perfection of
the heavens, and thereby (as such) divinely condemned to be fixed and
unmoving at the center of the universe as its dregs because the abode of a
post-Adamic “fallen” mankind had been an indispensable function of the
“verifying” of medieval Latin-Christian Europe’s then theocentric descrip-
tive statement of human as “sinful by nature.” In this way, the descriptive
statement on which the hegemony of the world of the Church over the lay
world was legitimated (Chorover 1979).
Gregory Bateson and Frantz Fanon, thinking and writing during the
upheaval of the anticolonial/social-protest movements of the sixties, were
both to put forward new conceptions of the human outside the terms of our
present ethnoclass conception that define it on the model of a natural organ-
ism, as these terms are elaborated by the disciplinary paradigms and overall
organization of knowledge of our present episteme (Foucault 1973). In an
essay entitled “Conscious Purpose vs. Nature,” published in 1969, Bateson
proposed that in the same way as the “physiology” and “neurology” of the
human individual function in order to conserve the body and all the body’s
physical characteristics—thereby serving as an overall system that con-
serves descriptive statements about the human as far as his/her body is con-
cerned—so a correlated process can be seen to be at work at the level of the
psyche or the soul. To put it another way, not only is the descriptive state-
ment of the psyche/soul determinant of the kind of higher-level learning
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that must take place, seeing that the indispensable function of each such
system of learning must be, imperatively, to conserve that descriptive state-
ment, but it is also determinant of the overall range of acquired know-how
that is produced by the interactions of the wider society in which each indi-
vidual finds itself—and as a society whose overall descriptive statement will
necessarily be of the same general order as that of the individual, at the level
of the psyche/soul. All such learning, whether at the microlevel of the indi-
vidual or at the macrolevel of the society, must therefore function within the
terms of what Foucault has identified as a specific “regime” and/or “politics
of truth” (Foucault 1980, 1981).
Fanon had then gone on to analyze the systemically negative represen-
tation of the Negro and of his African past that defined the curriculum of
the French colonial school system of the Caribbean island of Martinique in
which he had grown up (one in which, as he also notes, no Black counter-
voice had been allowed to exist), in order to reveal why, as a result of the
structures of Bateson’s system of learning designed to preserve the status
quo, the Antillean Negro had indeed been socialized to be normally anti-
Negro. Nor, the Argument proposes, was there anything arbitrary about this
deliberate blocking out or disregard of a “Black” voice, of a positive Black
self-conception. Rather this “blocking out” of a Black counter-voice was, and
is itself defining of the way in which being human, in the terms of our pres-
ent ethnoclass mode of sociogeny, dictates that Self, Other, and World should
be represented and known; a lay counter-voice could no more have normally
existed within the terms of the mode of sociogeny of medieval Latin-
Christian Europe. In consequence, because it is this premise that underlies
the interlinked nature of what I have defined (on the basis of Quijano’s
founding concept of the coloniality of power) as the Coloniality of Being/
Power/Truth/Freedom, with the logical inference that one cannot “unsettle”
the “coloniality of power” without a redescription of the human outside the
terms of our present descriptive statement of the human, Man, and its over-
representation (outside the terms of the “natural organism” answer that we
give to the question of the who and the what we are), the Argument will first
link this premise to a fundamental thesis developed by Nicholas Humphrey
in his book A History of the Mind: Evolution and the Birth of Consciousness,
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 269

published in 1992. It will then link both to the sixteenth-century dispute


between Bartolomé de Las Casas, the missionary priest, on the one hand,
and the humanist royal historian and apologist for the Spanish settlers of
then Santo Domingo, Ginés de Sepúlveda, on the other—as a dispute that it
will define as one between two descriptive statements of the human: one for
which the expansion of the Spanish state was envisaged as a function of the
Christian evangelizing mission, the Other for which the latter mission was
seen as a function of the imperial expansion of the state; a dispute, then,
between the theocentric conception of the human, Christian, and the new
humanist and ratiocentric conception of the human, Man2 (i.e., as homo
politicus, or the political subject of the state).
Here, the Argument, basing itself on Fanon’s and Bateson’s redefinition
of the human, proposes that the adaptive truth-for terms in which each
purely organic species must know the world is no less true in our human
case. That therefore, our varying ontogeny/sociogeny modes of being
human, as inscribed in the terms of each culture’s descriptive statement, will
necessarily give rise to their varying respective modalities of adaptive truths-
for, or epistemes, up to and including our contemporary own. Further, that
given the biocentric descriptive statement that is instituting of our present
mode of sociogeny, the way we at present normatively know Self, Other, and
social World is no less adaptively true as the condition of the continued pro-
duction and reproduction of such a genre of being human and of its order
as, before the revolution initiated by the Renaissance humanists, and given
the then theocentric descriptive statement that had been instituting of the
mode of sociogeny of medieval Latin-Christian Europe, its subjects had nor-
matively known Self, Other, as well as their social, physical, and organic
worlds, in the adaptively true terms needed for the production and repro-
duction not only of their then supernaturally legitimated genre of being
human, but as well for that of the hierarchical social structures in whose
intersubjective field that genre of the human could have alone realized itself.
And it is with the production and reproduction of the latter (i.e., the
social world) that a crucial difference needs to be identified in our human
case. This was the difference identified by C. P. Snow when he described our
present order of knowledge as one defined by a Two Culture divide between
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the natural sciences, on the one hand (whose domains comprise the physical
cosmos, as well as that of all biological life), and the disciplines of the social
sciences and the humanities on the other (Snow 1993). And although there
has been some attempt recently to rebut the hypothesis of this divide, cen-
trally among these the Gulbenkian Report on the social sciences prepared by
a team of scholars headed by Immanuel Wallerstein and Valentin Mudimbe
(1994), the fact remains that while the natural sciences can explain and pre-
dict, to a large extent, the behaviors of these nonhuman worlds, the disci-
plines of the social sciences and humanities still remain unable to explain
and predict the parameters of the ensemble of collective behaviors that are
instituting of our contemporary world—to explain, therefore, the why not
only of the large-scale inequalities, but also of the overall Janus-faced effects
of large-scale human emancipation yoked to the no less large-scale human
degradation and immiseration to which these behaviors collectively lead.
These behaviors, whether oriented by the residual metaphysics of
fertility/reproduction of the agrarian age in the poorer parts of the world, or
by the metaphysics of productivity and profitability of our techno-industrial
one in the rich enclaves—with the one impelling the dynamics of overpopu-
lation, and the other that of overconsumption—now collectively threaten the
planetary environment of our human-species habitat.
The Argument proposes, in this context, that the still unbreachable
divide between the “Two Cultures”—a divide that had been briefly chal-
lenged by the range of anticolonial as well as the social cum intellectual
movements of the sixties, before these movements were re-coopted—lies in
the fact that our own disciplines (as literary scholars and social scientists
whose domain is our sociohuman world) must still continue to function, as
all human orders of knowledge have done from our origin on the continent
of Africa until today, as a language-capacitated form of life, to ensure that
we continue to know our present order of social reality, and rigorously so, in
the adaptive “truth-for” terms needed to conserve our present descriptive
statement. That is, as one that defines us biocentrically on the model of a
natural organism, with this a priori definition serving to orient and motivate
the individual and collective behaviors by means of which our contemporary
Western world-system or civilization, together with its nation-state sub-
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 271

units, are stably produced and reproduced. This at the same time as it
ensures that we, as Western and westernized intellectuals, continue to artic-
ulate, in however radically oppositional a manner, the rules of the social
order and its sanctioned theories (Konrad and Szelenyi 1979).
Recent and still ongoing scholarship on archaeo-astronomy has shown
that all human orders—from the smallest society of nomadic hunter-gath-
erers, such as the San people of the Kalahari, to the large-scale societies of
Egypt, China, the Greeks, and the Romans—have mapped their “descriptive
statements” or governing master codes on the heavens, on their stable peri-
odicities and regular recurring movements (Krupp 1997). Because, in doing
so, they had thereby mapped their specific criterion of being human, of what
it was “to be a good man and woman of one’s kind” (Davis 1992), onto the
physical cosmos, thereby absolutizing each such criterion; and with this
enabling them to be experienced by each order’s subjects as if they had been
supernaturally (and, as such, extrahumanly) determined criteria, their
respective truths had necessarily come to function as an “objective set of
facts” for the people of that society—seeing that such truths were now the
indispensable condition of their existence as such a society, as such people,
as such a mode of being human. These truths had therefore both com-
manded obedience and necessitated the individual and collective behaviors
by means of which each such order and its mode of being human were
brought into existence, produced, and stably reproduced. This, therefore,
meant that all such knowledges of the physical cosmos, all such astronomies,
all such geographies, whatever the vast range of human needs that they had
successfully met, the range of behaviors they had made possible—indeed,
however sophisticated and complex the calculations that they had enabled
to be made of the movements of the heavens (as in the case of Egypt and
China)—had still remained adaptive truths-for and, as such, ethno-
astronomies, ethno-geographies.
This was no less the case with respect to the long tradition of Greek/
Hellenistic astronomy, which a medieval Judeo-Christian Europe would have
inherited. Since, in spite of the great advances in mathematical astronomy
to which its fundamental Platonic postulate (that of an eternal, “divinized”
cosmos as contrasted with the Earth, which was not only subject to change
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and corruption, but was fixed and unmoving at the center) has led a long
line of astronomers to struggle to “save the phenomena” (i.e., to reconcile
their measurements of the movements of the heavens with this premise),
Greek astronomy was to remain an ethno-astronomy. One, that is, in which
the moral/political laws of the Greek polis had been projected upon the
physical cosmos, enabling them to serve as “objective truth” in Feyerabend’s
(1987) sense of the term, and therefore as, in my own terms, adaptive truth-
for the Greeks. With the consequence that their projected premise of a value
distinction and principle of ontological distinction between heaven and
earth had functioned to analogically replicate and absolutize the central
order-organizing principle and genre-of-the-human distinction at the level
of the sociopolitical order, between the non-dependent masters who were
Greek-born citizens and their totally dependent slaves classified as barbar-
ian Others. With this value distinction (sociogenic principle or master code
of symbolic life/death) then being replicated at the level of the intra-Greek
society, in gendered terms (correlatedly), as between males, who were citi-
zens, and women, who were their dependents.
In a 1987 interview, the theoretical physicist David Bohm explained why
the rise of the physical sciences would have been impossible in ancient
Greece, given the role that the physical cosmos had been made to play in sta-
bilizing and legitimating the structures/hierarchies and role allocations of
its social order. If each society, Bohm pointed out, bases itself on a general
notion of the world that always contains within it “a specific idea of order,”
for the ancient Greeks, this idea of order had been projected as that of an
“increasing perfection from the earth to the heavens.” In consequence, in
order for modern physics (which is based on the “idea of successive posi-
tions of bodies of matter and the constraints of forces that act on these bod-
ies”) to be developed, the “order of perfection investigated by the ancient
Greeks” had to become irrelevant. In other words, for such an astronomy
and physics to be developed, the society that made it possible would have to
be one that no longer had the need to map its ordering principle onto the
physical cosmos, as the Greeks and all other human societies had done. The
same goes for the need to retain the Greek premise of an ontological differ-
ence of substance between the celestial realm of perfection (the realm of
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 273

true knowledge) and the imperfect realm of the terrestrial (the realm of
doxa, of mere opinion).
This was not a mutation that could be easily effected. In his recent book
The Enigma of the Gift (1999), Maurice Godelier reveals an added and even
more powerful dimension as to why the mutation by which humans would
cease to map the “idea of order” onto the lawlike regularities of physical
nature would not be easily come by. This would come to be effected only in
the wake of the Renaissance humanists’ initiation of the processes that
would lead to the degodding/de-supernaturalizing of our modes of being
human on the basis of their invention of Man in the reoccupied place of
their earlier matrix theocentric identity, Christian.
Although, Godelier writes, as human beings who live in society, and who
must also produce society in order to live, we have hitherto always done so
by producing, at the same time, the mechanisms by means of which we have
been able to invert cause and effect, allowing us to repress the recognition
of our collective production of our modes of social reality (and with it,
the Argument proposes, the recognition also of the self-inscripted, auto-
instituted nature of our genres/modes of being human). Central to these
mechanisms was the one by which we projected our own authorship of our
societies onto the ostensible extrahuman agency of supernatural Imaginary
Beings (Godelier 1999). This imperative has been total in the case of all
human orders (even where in the case of our now purely secular order, the
extrahuman agency on which our authorship is now projected is no longer
supernatural, but rather that of Evolution/Natural Selection together with
its imagined entity of “Race”). As if, in our contemporary case, Evolution,
which pre-adapted us by means of the co-evolution of language and the
brain to self-inscript and auto-institute our modes of being human, and to
thereby artificially program our own behaviors—doing so, as the biologist
James Danielli pointed out in a 1980 essay, by means of the discourses of reli-
gion, as well as of the secular ones that have now taken their place—still
continued to program our hybrid ontogeny/sociogeny behaviors by means of
unmediated genetic programs. Rather than, as Danielli further argued, all
such behaviors being lawlikely induced by discursively instituted programs
whose good/evil formulations function to activate the biochemical
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reward/punishment mechanism of the brain—as a mechanism that, while


common to all species, functions in the case of humans in terms specific to
each such narratively inscribed and discursively elaborated descriptive
statement and, thereby, to its mode of the “I” and correlated symboli-
cally/altruistically bonded mode of the eusocial “we” (Danielli 1980).
If, as David Bohm pointed out, the Greeks’ “idea of order” had been
mapped upon degrees of perfection, projected upon the physical cosmos as
degrees of rational perfection extending from the apex of the heavens’
degrees to the nonhomogenous nadir of the earth’s—with the rise, in the
wake of the collapse of the Roman Empire, of a now Judeo-Christian Europe,
while the classical Greco-Roman (i.e., Ptolemaic) astronomy that had given
expression to the Greek idea of order was to be carried over—it was to be
Christianized within the terms of Judeo-Christianity’s new “descriptive
statement” of the human, based on its master code of the “Redeemed Spirit”
(as actualized in the celibate clergy) and the “Fallen Flesh” enslaved to the
negative legacy of Adamic Original Sin, as actualized by laymen and women.
Hence the logic by which medieval Latin-Christian Europe’s “notion of the
world” and “idea of order” would become one of degrees of spiritual perfec-
tion, at the same time as it would remain mapped onto the same “space of
Otherness” principle of nonhomogeneity (Godzich 1986). With the result
that on the basis of this projection, the medieval Latin-Christian subject’s
sensory perception of a motionless earth would have “verified” for them not
only the postulate of mankind’s justly condemned enslavement to the nega-
tive Adamic legacy, but, even more centrally, the “sinful by nature” descrip-
tive statement of the human in whose terms they both experienced
themselves as Christians, being thereby behaviorally impelled to seek
redemption from their enslavement through the sacraments of the Church,
as well as by adhering to its prohibitions, and to thereby strive to attain to
its otherworldly goal—that of Divine Election for eternal salvation in the
Augustinian civitas dei (the city of God).
Central to Winant’s “immense historical rupture,” therefore, was the con-
ceptual break made with the Greco-Roman cum Judeo-Christian premise of
a nonhomogeneity of substance, and thereby of an ontological distinction
between the supralunar and the sublunar, heaven and earth, as the break
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 275

that was to make possible the rise of a nonadaptive, and therefore natural-
scientific, mode of cognition with respect to the “objective set of facts” of the
physical level of reality: with respect to what was happening “out there.” The
fifteenth-century voyages of the Portuguese (to and around Africa, then to
the East), as well as Columbus’s voyages across an until-then held to be (by
Western Europeans) non-navigable Atlantic Ocean (since both of these
areas, Black Africa and the Americas, had been held to be uninhabitable, the
one because too hot, the other because under water, with both being outside
God’s providential Grace) were themselves expressions of the same overall
process of self-transformation. This as the process that, internal to late-
medieval Latin-Christian Europe, was to underpin the rise of the modern
political city and monarchical states of Europe, and that (together with an
ongoing commercial revolution) were to effectively displace the theologi-
cally absolute hegemony of the Church, together with that of its celibate
clergy, over the lay or secular world, replacing it with that of their (i.e. the
monarchical states’) politically absolute own. The new conceptual ground of
this reversal had, however, been made possible only on the basis of the intel-
lectual revolution of Renaissance humanists—a revolution that, while allied
to the Reform movement of Christian humanism, was mounted in large part
from the counter-perspective of the lay intelligentsia. From the viewpoint,
therefore, of the category whose members had until then been compelled to
think and work within the very theocentric paradigms that legitimated the
dominance of the post-Gregorian Reform Church and its celibate clergy (the
name clergy means, in Greek, the chosen) over the lay world—as these par-
adigms had been elaborated in the context of the then hegemonic Scholastic
order of knowledge of medieval Europe.
This theological condemnation of the “natural man” of the laity had
become even more intensified by medieval Scholasticism’s reconception of
the human in Aristotelian Unmoved/Mover terms. Its Omnipotent God had
created the world for the sake of His Own Glory, thereby creating mankind
only contingently and without any consideration for its own sake (propter
nos homines/for our human sake), had left it, in the wake of the Adamic Fall
and its subsequent enslavement to the Fallen Flesh, without any hope of
being able to have any valid knowledge of reality except through the media-
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tion of the very paradigms that excluded any such hope. Given that it was
precisely these theologically absolute paradigms that, by circularly verifying
the “sinful by nature” cognitive incapacity of fallen mankind, served at the
same time to validate both the hegemony of the Church and of the celibate
clergy over the lay world, including the state, as well as the hegemony of the
supratemporal perspective of the Church (based on its represented access to
Divine Eternal Truth) over any knowledge generated from the local, tempo-
ral, and this-worldly perspective of a lay world ostensibly entrapped in the
fallen time of the secular realm, this thereby subjected mankind to the insta-
bility and chaos of the capricious whims of Fortune (Pocock 1989).
The lay intelligentsia of medieval Europe had, therefore, found them-
selves in a situation in whose context, in order to be learned and accom-
plished scholars, they had had to be accomplices in the production of a
“politics of truth” that subordinated their own lay world and its perspective
on reality to that of the Church and of the clergy. Accomplices also in the
continued theoretical elaboration of a theocentric descriptive statement of
the human, in whose terms they were always already the embodied bearers
of its postulate of “significant ill”—that of enslavement to Original Sin—an
“ill” curable or redeemable only through the mediation of the Church and
the clergy, and circularly, through that of the theologically absolute para-
digms that verified the hegemony of the latter.
The manifesto (put forward from the perspective of the laity) that was to
make possible the rupture in whose terms the Copernican Revolution and
the new epoch that would become that of the modern world were to be
made possible was that of the fifteenth-century treatise by the Italian
humanist Pico della Mirandola (1463‒1494) entitled Oration on the Dignity of
Man. In this treatise, Pico rewrote the Judeo-Christian origin narrative of
Genesis. Adam, rather than having been placed in the Garden of Eden, then
having fallen, then having been expelled with Eve from the garden by God,
is shown by Pico to have not fallen at all. Instead, he had come into existence
when God, having completed his Creation and wanting someone to admire
His works, had created Man on a model unique to him, then placed him at
the center/midpoint of the hierarchy of this creation, commanding him to
“make of himself ” what he willed to be—to decide for himself whether to fall
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 277

to the level of the beasts by giving into his passions, or, through the use of
his reason, to rise to the level of the angels (See Pico’s guide-quote). It was
therefore to be on the basis of this new conception, and of its related civic-
humanist reformulation, that Man was to be invented in its first form as the
rational political subject of the state, as one who displayed his reason by pri-
marily adhering to the laws of the state—rather than, as before, in seeking
to redeem himself from enslavement to Original Sin by primarily adhering
to the prohibitions of the Church.
Two strategies were made use of in order to effect this epochal degod-
ding (if, at first, only in hybridly religio-secular terms) of the “descriptive
statement” in whose terms humans inscript and institute themselves/our-
selves as this or that genre of being human. The strategy was that of a return:
the return by the humanists to Greco-Roman thought, to (in the case of
Pico) the Jewish mystical tradition of the Kabbalah, as well as to the even
earlier Egyptian thought as transmitted through these latter, in order to find
both a space outside the terms of the medieval order’s “descriptive state-
ment” and an alternative model on which to reinvent the matrix optimally
Redeemed-in-the-Spirit Self of the Christian, the “subject of the church,” as
that of the Rational Self of Man as political subject of the state. While it was
the revalorization of natural man that was implicit in this overall return to
the Greco-Roman and other pre-Christian thought, and models by Renais-
sance humanists such as Ficino and Pico, as Fernand Hallyn (1990) has pro-
posed, that was to make possible Copernicus’s intellectual challenge to the
ontological distinction between the supralunar and sublunar realms of the
cosmos: to its foundational premise of a nonhomogeneity of substance
between them.
Why was this the case? Within the terms of the medieval order’s theo-
centric conception of the relation between a totally Omnipotent God and
contingently created humans, the latter could not attempt to gain valid
knowledge of physical reality by basing him/herself on the regularity of its
laws of functioning. Seeing that God, as an absolute and unbound God,
could arbitrarily intervene in the accustomed course of nature (cursus soli-
tus naturae) in order to alter its processes of functioning, by means of mir-
acles, at any time He wished to do so. It was therefore to be, as Hallyn
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proposes, the humanists’ revalorized conception of a more egalitarian rela-


tion between natural man and a Christian God, reconceived as a Caring
Father who had created the universe specifically for man’s sake (propter nos
homines, for our human sake), that provided the counter-ground for the
Copernican rupture with the orthodox Christianized astronomy that had
been inherited from the Greeks. It was the new premise that God had cre-
ated the world/universe for mankind’s sake, as a premise that ensured that
He would have had to make it according to rational, nonarbitrary rules that
could be knowable by the beings that He had made it for, that would lead to
Copernicus’s declaration (against the epistemological resignation of
Ptolemaic astronomy, which said that such knowledge was not available for
mere mortals) that since the universe had been made for our sake by the best
and wisest of master craftsmen, it had to be knowable (see Copernicus
guide-quote).
In his book The Medieval Imagination, Jacques Le Goff analyzes the way
in which the medieval order of Latin-Christian Europe had organized itself
about a value principle or master code that had been actualized in the
empirical relation between the celibate category of the clergy (as the embod-
iment of the Spirit, and the noncelibate category of the 1aity (as the embod-
iment of the Fallen Flesh). This Spirit/Flesh code had then been projected
onto the physical cosmos, precisely onto the represented nonhomogeneity of
substance between the spiritual perfection of the heavens (whose supralu-
nar bodies were imagined to move in harmonious and perfectly circular
motions) as opposed to the sublunar realm of Earth, which, as the abode of
a post-Adamic fallen mankind, had to be at the center of the universe as its
dregs—and, in addition, to be not only nonmoving as it is sensed by us to
be, but to be so because divinely condemned to be nonmoving in the wake
of the Fall. However, it was not only the Earth that had to be known in these
adaptive truth-for terms, within the conceptual framework of the Christian-
Ptolemaic astronomy of the time. The geography of the earth had also had
to be known in parallel Spirit/Flesh terms as being divided up between, on
the one hand, its temperate regions centered on Jerusalem—regions that,
because held up above the element of water by God’s Providential Grace,
were habitable—and, on the other, those realms that, because outside this
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 279

Grace, had to be uninhabitable. Before the fifteenth-century voyages of the


Portuguese and Columbus, which disproved this premise of the nonhomo-
geneity of the earth’s geography, the Torrid Zone beyond the bulge of Cape
Bojador on the upper coast of Africa had therefore had to be known as too
hot for habitation, while the Western hemisphere had had to be known as
being devoid of land, seeing that all land there had to remain, in the frame-
work of Christian Aristotelian physics, submerged in its “natural place”
under water, since ostensibly not held “unnaturally” above the water by
Divine Grace.
This series of symbolically coded Spirit/Flesh representations mapped
upon the “space of Otherness” of the physical cosmos had not only func-
tioned to absolutize the theocentric descriptive statement of the human, its
master code of symbolic life (the Spirit) and death (the Flesh), together with
that statement’s overall explanatory thesis of supernatural causation. It had
also served to absolutize “a general order of existence,” together with its
“postulate of significant ill,” whose mode of affliction then logically calls for
the particular “plan of salvation” or redemptive cure able to cure the specific
“ill” that threatened all the subjects of the order, in order to redeem them
from its threat of nihilation/negation that is common to all religions
(Girardot 1988). Now in specific Judeo-Christian formulation, the postulate
of “significant ill” had, of course, been that of mankind’s enslavement to
Original Sin, with his/her fallen state placing him/her outside God’s Grace,
except when redeemed from this “ill” by the sacrament of baptism as admin-
istered by the clergy. While this behavior-motivating schema had itself also
been anchored on the Spirit/Flesh, inside/outside God’s Grace, ill/cure sys-
tem of symbolic representations attached to the represented supra/sublunar
nonhomogeneity of substance of the physical cosmos, as well as to the hab-
itable/uninhabitable geography of the earth.
Here the Argument identifies Girardot’s schemas as ones that also func-
tion beyond the limits of original religious modalities, seeing them instead
in the terms of Danielli’s hypothesis as forms of the central, behavior-moti-
vating/-demotivating, discursive, good/evil postulates, able to activate the
biochemical reward and punishment mechanism—and, therefore, as the
central “machinery of programming” that is common to all human orders,
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whether religious or secular. In consequence, whether religious or secular, all


such schemas/programs and their formulations of “a general order of exis-
tence” also function to inscribe the specific “descriptive statement” of the
human that is enacting of the ontogeny/sociogeny, nature-culture mode of
being human, for whom the specific ensemble of motivated behaviors will be
adaptively advantageous. In this conceptual framework it can therefore be
recognized that it was in the context of the humanists’ redescribing of the
Christian definition of the human—in new, revalorizing, and (so to speak)
propter nos homines and/or Man-centric terms—that the series of fifteenth-
century voyages on whose basis the West began its global expansion voyages
(one of which proved that the earth was homogeneously habitable by
humans, seeing that the Torrid Zone was indeed inhabited, as was that of
the land of the Western hemisphere that turned out to be above water),
together with Copernicus’s new astronomy (which proposed that the earth
also moved about the Sun, projected as the center, and was therefore of the
same substance as, homogeneous with, the heavenly bodies), were to initi-
ate the rupture that would lead to the rise of the physical sciences. Thereby,
to a new order of cognition in which “the objective set of facts” of the phys-
ical level of reality was now to be gradually freed from having to be known
in the adaptive terms of a truth-for specific to each order, as they had been
millennially—to be known as they were and are “out there.”
What needs to be emphasized here is, firstly, that the two orthodox pre-
suppositions that were now to be swept away—that of the nonhomogeneity
of the geography of the earth and that of the nonhomogeneity of the earth and
the heavens—had been ones indispensable to the conservation of the
medieval order’s theocentric descriptive statement of the human. Secondly, it
had been the reinvention by the lay humanists of the Renaissance of the
matrix identity Christian in terms of the new descriptive statement of Man as
political subject, allied to the historical rise and expansion of the modern
state (for whom, eventually, these earlier orthodox presuppositions, their
truth-fors, were expendable, because no longer of any adaptive advantage to
its own instituting as such a mode of being human), that had made the sweep-
ing away of the earlier unquestioned principles of nonhomogeneity possible.
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 281

This sweeping away led a later Isaac Newton to exult that, because it had now
been shown that all parts of the universe were made of the same forces, of the
same matter, one could now be able to extrapolate from the bodies nearest to
us, and on the analogy of nature always consonant with itself, what the bod-
ies furthest from us had necessarily to be (Funkenstein 1986).
To sum up: this means that the epochal rupture that was set in motion
by Western intellectuals, by means of which human knowledge of the phys-
ical cosmos would be freed from having to be known in the adaptive truth-
for terms that had been hitherto indispensable to the instituting of all
human orders and their respective modes/genres of being human—the rup-
ture that was to lead to the gradual development of the physical sciences—
had been made possible only by the no less epochal reinvention of Western
Europe’s matrix Judeo-Christian genre of the human, in its first secularizing
if still hybridly religio-secular terms as Man as the Rational Self and politi-
cal subject of the state, in the reoccupied place of the True Christian Self, or
mode of sociogeny, of Latin-Christian Europe; by the reinvention also of the
secular entity of the West in the reoccupied place of the latter, with this rein-
vention being based on the model of Virgil’s Roman imperial epic.
This takes us back to the negative aspect of the dialectical process of cul-
ture-historical transformation by which the West was to initiate the first
phase of the degodding of its descriptive statement of the human, thereby
also initiating the processes that were to lead to the development of the new
order of nonadaptive cognition that is the natural sciences. Since it was to
be in the specific terms of this reinvention—one in which while, as
Christians, the peoples of the West would see themselves as one religious
genre of the human, even where they were to be convinced that theirs was
the only true religion, and indeed, as Lyotard points out, were unable to con-
ceive of an Other to what they called God—as Man, they would now not only
come to overrepresent their conception of the human (by means of a sus-
tained rhetorical strategy based on the topos of iconicity [Valesio 1980]) as
the human, thereby coming to invent, label, and institutionalize the indige-
nous peoples of the Americas as well as the transported enslaved Black
Africans as the physical referent of the projected irrational/subrational
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Human Other to its civic-humanist, rational self-conception. The West


would therefore remain unable, from then on, to conceive of an Other to
what it calls human—an Other, therefore, to its correlated postulates of
power, truth, freedom. All other modes of being human would instead have
to be seen not as the alternative modes of being human that they are “out
there,” but adaptively, as the lack of the West’s ontologically absolute self-
description. This at the same time as its genuine difference from all others
(i.e., its secularizing reinvention of its matrix religious identity from the
Renaissance onwards as that of Man in two forms—one ratiocentric and still
hybridly religio-secular, the other purely secular and biocentric) would
remain overseen, even non-theorizable within the acultural premise on
whose basis it had effected the reinvention of its matrix Christian genre or
theological “descriptive statement” of the human.
This central oversight would then enable both Western and westernized
intellectuals to systemically repress what Geertz has identified as the “fugi-
tive truth” of its own “local culturality” (Geertz 1983)—of, in Bruno Latour’s
terms, its specific “constitution with a capital C,” or cultural constitution
that underlies and charters our present order, as the parallel constitutions of
all other human orders that Western anthropologists have brilliantly eluci-
dated underlie and charter all other human orders (Latour 1991)—doing so
according to the same hybrid nature-culture, ontogeny/sociogeny laws or
rules. With this systemic repression ensuring that we oversee (thereby fail-
ing to recognize) the culture and class-specific relativity of our present mode
of being human: Man in the second, transumed, and now purely biocentric
and homo oeconomicus form of that first invention that was to lead to
Winant’s “immense historical rupture,” to Quijano’s “Racism/Ethnicism”
complex, and to Mignolo’s modernity/coloniality complementarity.
What were the specific terms of that first reinvention? Of its overrepre-
sentation? Why were these terms to lie at the basis of the Las Casas/
Sepúlveda dispute, whose empirical outcome—in favor of the latter’s
humanist arguments as opposed to Las Casas’s still theologically grounded
ones—was to provide the legitimated “ground” for what was to become the
colonizer (both the metropolitan imperialists and their settler enforcers) vs.
colonized relation (both Indians and Negroes, on the one hand, and the set-
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 283

tlers as criollos subjugated to the metropolitan peninsulares—whether


those of Spain, England, or France—on the other).

PA RT I I
The Las Casas/Sepúlveda Dispute and the Paradox of the Humanists’
Invention/Overrepresentation of “Man”: On the Coloniality of Secular
Being, the Instituting of Human Others.

The suggestion that the Indians might be slaves by nature—a suggestion


which claimed to answer questions concerning both their political and their
legal status—was first advanced as a solution to a political dilemma: by what
right had the crown of Castile occupied and enslaved the inhabitants of ter-
ritories to which it could make no prior claims based on history? . . . [John
Mair’s text adopted from Aristotle’s Politics] was immediately recognized by
some Spaniards as offering a final solution to their problem. Mair had, in
effect, established that the Christians’ claims to sovereignty over certain
pagans could be said to rest on the nature of the people being conquered,
instead of on the supposed juridical rights of the conquerors. He thus
avoided the inevitable and alarming deduction to be drawn from an appli-
cation of these arguments: namely that the Spaniards had no right whatso-
ever to be in America.
—Anthony Pagden, The Fall of Natural Man: The American
Indians and the Origins of Comparative Ethnology

Leopoldo is asked to compare the Spaniards with the Indians, “who in pru-
dence, wisdom (ingenium), every virtue and humanity are as inferior to the
Spaniards as children are to adults, women are to men, the savage and fero-
cious [man] to the gentle, the grossly intemperate to the continent and tem-
perate and finally, I shall say, almost as monkeys are to men.” . . . “Compare
the gifts of magnanimity, temperance, humanity and religion of these men,”
continues Democrates, “with those homunculi [i.e., the Indians] in whom
hardly a vestige of humanity remains.”
—Ginés de Sepúlveda (cited by Pagden)
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The major reason for writing (this book) was that of seeing all and such an
infinite number of the nations of this vast part of the world slandered
(defamed) by those who did not fear God . . . [and who published] it abroad
that the peoples of these parts, were peoples who lacked sufficient reason to
govern themselves properly, were deficient in public policy (and) in well-
ordered states (republics) . . . as if Divine Providence, in its creation of such
an innumerable number of rational souls, had carelessly allowed human
nature to so err . . . in the case of such a vast part of the human lineage (de
linaje humano) as is comprised by these people allowing them to be born
lacking in sociality, and therefore, as monstrous peoples, against the natural
tendency of all the peoples of the earth . . .
—Fr. Bartolomé de Las Casas, Apologetic History of the Indies

I am talking of millions of men who have been skillfully injected with fear,
inferiority complexes, trepidation, servility, despair, abasement.
—Aimé Césaire, Discourse on Colonialism5

Leopoldo: If a breach of natural law is a just cause for making war, either I
am wrong, or there will be no nation on earth that cannot be militarily
attacked because of their sins against, or breaches of, the natural law. Tell me
then, how many and which nations do you expect to find who fully observe
the law of nature?
Democrates: Many do, I am sure: [but] there are no nations which call them-
selves civilized and are civilized who do not observe natural law.
—Ginés de Sepúlveda, The Second Democrates, or
On the Just Causes of War Against the Indians

Clearly one cannot prove in a short time or with a few words to infidels that
to sacrifice men to God is contrary to nature. Consequently neither anthro-
pophagy nor human sacrifice constitutes just cause for making war on cer-
tain kingdoms. . . . For the rest, to sacrifice innocents for the salvation of the
Commonwealth is not opposed to natural reason, is not something abom-
inable and contrary to nature, but is an error that has its origin in natural
reason itself.
—Las Casas’s reply to Ginés de Sepúlveda6
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 285

And there is no difference with respect to the duties imposed upon these
who do not know him, (the True God as we Christians do) as long as they
hold some God to be the true God, and honor him as such. . . . This is because
the mistaken conscience/consciousness (la conciencia erronea) obliges and
compels exactly the same way as does the true/a correct one (la conciencia
recta).
—Las Casas, Tratados de Fray Bartolomé de Las Casas (Third Treatise)

The priest Casas having at the time no knowledge of the unjust methods
which the Portuguese used to obtain slaves, advised that permission should
be given for the import of slaves into the islands, an advice which, once he
became informed about these methods, he would not have given for the
world. . . . The remedy which he proposed to import Black slaves in order to
liberate the Indians was not a good one, even though he thought the Black
slaves, at the time to have been enslaved with a just title; and it is not at all
certain that his ignorance at the time or even the purity of his motive will
sufficiently absolve him when he finds himself before the Divine Judge.
—Las Casas, History of the Indies (vol. 3)

. . . Doctor Sepúlveda, before dealing with an issue of which he had no direct


knowledge should have sought information from those servants of God, who
have toiled day and night to preach to convert the peoples of the Indies,
rather than have rushed to pay heed to and give credit to those profane and
tyrannical men who, in order to justify the expropriations (latrocinio) rob-
beries and murders that they have committed, as well as the usurped social
rank to which they have climbed doing so at the cost of the vast torrents of
spilled blood, of the suffering and damnation of an infinite number of inno-
cent souls, have persuaded him to write his thesis [i.e., in defence of their
position/interests].
—Las Casas, Tratados

Culture, in my view, is what a human being creates and what creates a human
being at the same time. In culture, the human being is simultaneously cre-
ator and creation. This is what makes culture different from both the natu-
ral and the supernatural; because in the supernatural we have the world of
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the Creator, and in nature we have the world of creations. The coincidence
of these two roles in a human being is what makes him a cultural being. . . .
Transculture means a space in, or among, cultures, which is open to all of
them. Culture frees us from nature; transculture frees us from culture, from
any one culture.
—Mikhail Epstein, “Postcommunist Postmodernism: An Interview”

About the Pope being the Lord of all the universe in the place of God, and
that he had given the lands of the Indies to the King of Castille, the Pope
must have been drunk when he did it, for he gave what was not his. . . . The
king who asked for and received this gift must have been some madman for
he asked to have given to him that which belonged to others.
—Cenú Indians’ reply to the Spaniards7

Two different anthropologies and their respective origin models/narratives


had inscribed two different descriptive statements of the human, one
which underpinned the evangelizing mission of the Church, the other the
imperializing mission of the state based on its territorial expansion and
conquest. Nevertheless, rather than merely a Christian/classics opposition,
the second descriptive statement, that of “Man” as political subject of the
state, was to be instead a syncretized synthesis of the anthropology of the
classics drawn into a secularizing Judeo-Christian framework, and there-
fore into the field of what Latour would call the West’s “constitution with
a capital C.”
This syncretism had already been at work in the formulations of Ficino
and Pico della Mirandola. For the latter, classical thought had enabled him,
as part of his revalorizing strategy of natural man, to fuse the original Judeo-
Christian conception of the human as being made in the image of God, with
the view of Platonic philosophy in which man is defined by the fact of the
choice that he can give himself to adopt “the sensual life of an animal or the
philosophical life of the gods.” Ficino had also defined man in terms derived
from both Christian and Platonic, as well as other pre-Christian sources as
a creature standing between “the physical world of nature” and “the spiritual
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 287

world of the angels of God”: as balanced between “natural” and “supernatu-


ral” order. It was in the context of this syncretized reinscription that the new
criterion of Reason would come to take the place of the medieval criterion
of the Redeemed Spirit as its transumed form—that the master code of sym-
bolic life (“the name of what is good”) and death (“the name of what is evil”)
would now become that of reason/sensuality, rationality/irrationality in the
reoccupied place of the matrix code of Redeemed Spirit/Fallen Flesh. The
descriptive statement instituting of the humanists’ Man would therefore use
the Judeo-Christian answer to the what and who we are (i.e., the “human
created in the image of God,” but later become the embodiment of Original
Sin) to revalorize the medieval order’s fallen natural man by proposing that,
because “God is included in man in that an image embodies and includes its
exemplar,” human reason had remained “lord over the senses similar to the
way in which God is lord over his creatures.”
The relation here is one of analogy. While reason is not a god, “it par-
takes of some of God’s functions” in that it is intended to rule over a “lower
order of reality.” The fundamental separation for Pico was one between two
orders of creation, with man placed by God at the midpoint between them.
These were, on the one hand, the “super-celestial” regions with minds (i.e.,
angels, pure intelligences), and on the other, a region “filled with a diverse
throng of animals, the cast off and residual parts of the lower world.” Placed
between these two realms, man was the only creature “confined by no
bounds,” free to “fix limits of nature” for himself, free to be “molder and
maker of himself ” (see Pico’s guide-quote). Rather than the medieval
Christian’s choice of remaining enslaved to the Fallen Flesh and to Original
Sin, or seeking to be Redeemed-in-the-Spirit through the sacraments of the
Church, this newly invented Man’s choice is that of either growing down-
wards into the lower natures of brutes, or responding to the Creator’s call to
grow “upward” to “higher” and “divine” natures (Miller 1965).
With this redescription, the medieval world’s idea of order as based upon
degrees of spiritual perfection/imperfection, an idea of order centered on
the Church, was now to be replaced by a new one based upon degrees of
rational perfection/imperfection. And this was to be the new “idea of order”
on whose basis the coloniality of being, enacted by the dynamics of the rela-
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tion between Man—overrepresented as the generic, ostensibly supracultural


human—and its subjugated Human Others (i.e., Indians and Negroes),
together with, as Quijano notes, the continuum of new categories of humans
(i.e., mestizos and mulattos to which their human/subhuman value differ-
ence gave rise), was to be brought into existence as the foundational basis of
modernity. With this revealing that, from the very origin, the issue of race,
as the issue of the Colonial Question, the Nonwhite/Native Question, the
Negro Question, yet as one that has hitherto had no name, was and is fun-
damentally the issue of the genre of the human, Man, in its two variants—
the issue of its still ongoing production/reproduction in the form of the
second variant.
The clash between Las Casas and Sepúlveda was a clash over this issue—
the clash as to whether the primary generic identity should continue to be
that of Las Casas’s theocentric Christian, or that of the newly invented Man
of the humanists, as the rational (or ratiocentric) political subject of the
state (the latter as the “descriptive statement” in whose terms Sepúlveda
spoke). And this clash was to be all the more deep-seated in that the human-
ists, while going back to the classics and to other pre-Christian sources in
order to find a model of being human alternative to the one in whose terms
the lay world was necessarily subordinated, had effected their now new con-
ception and its related “formulation of a general order of existence” only by
transuming that of the Church’s matrix Judeo-Christian conception, thereby
carrying over the latter’s schematic structure, as well as many of its residual
meanings.
In this transumed reformulation, while the “significant ill” of mankind’s
enslavement was no longer projected as being to the negative legacy of
Adamic Original Sin, the concept of enslavement was carried over and
redescribed as being, now, to the irrational aspects of mankind’s human
nature. This redescription had, in turn, enabled the new behavior-motivating
“plan of salvation” to be secularized in the political terms of the this-worldly
goals of the state. Seeing that because the “ill” or “threat” was now that of
finding oneself enslaved to one’s passions, to the particularistic desires of
one’s human nature, salvation/redemption could only be found by the sub-
ject able to subdue his private interests in order to adhere to the laws of the
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 289

politically absolute state, and thereby to the “common good.” This meant
that the primary behavior-motivating goal, rather than that of seeking sal-
vation in the civitas dei, was now that of adhering to the goal of the civitas
saecularis (Pocock 1975): the goal, that is, of seeking to ensure the stability,
order, and territorial expansion of the state in a competitive rivalry with
other European states. This at the same time as the primacy of the earlier
religious ethic, as defended by Las Casas from a universalistic Christian per-
spective, was replaced by the new ethic of “reasons of state,” as the ethic car-
ried by a Sepúlveda whose civic humanist values were still, at the time, only
incipiently emergent. However, it is the latter ethic that, given the existen-
tial sociopolitical and commercial, on-the-ground processes that were to
lead to the rapid rise of the centralizing state,8 to its replacement of the
medieval system-ensemble with its monarchical own (Hubner 1983), and to
the expanding mercantilism with its extra-European territorial conquests,
exponentially accelerated was soon to triumph and become the accepted
doctrine of the times.
Nowhere is this mutation of ethics seen more clearly than in two plays
written in the first decades of the seventeenth century: one the well-known
play by Shakespeare, The Tempest; the other the less well-known play by
Spain’s Lope de Vega, written at roughly the same time and entitled The New
World Discovered by Christopher Columbus. In the plot of The Tempest, the
central opposition is represented as being between Prospero and Caliban;
that is, between Higher Reason as expressed in the former, and irrational,
sensual nature as embodied in the latter. The drunken sailors, Stephano and
Trinculo, had also, like Caliban, been shown as embodying that enslavement
to the irrational aspects of human nature (if to a lesser degree than the lat-
ter) which Prospero must repress in himself if he is to act as a rational ruler;
that is, one for whom the securing of the stability and order of the state (in
effect, reasons-of-state) had now to be the overriding imperative, the major
this-worldly goal. And while Miranda as woman, and as a young girl, is
shown as poised at midpoint between rational and irrational nature, she is
pre-assured of attaining to the former status because of her father’s tutor-
ing. This master code of rational nature/irrational nature, together with the
new “idea of order” as that of degrees of rational perfection in place of the
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earlier degrees of spiritual perfection, is also seen to be at work in Lope’s


play, even where syncretized with the earlier religious ethic within the con-
text of Spain’s Counter Reformation order of discourse. There, the
rational/irrational master code contrasts the rational Christian king and
queen of Spain, Ferdinand and Isabel, as opposed, on the one hand, to the
“irrational” Moorish prince of Granada—who is shown dallying with the
sensual pleasures of love while Ferdinand and Isabel capture Granada, dis-
placing him (“Orientalism” has an even longer history than Said has
traced!)—and on the other, and most totally so,9 to the “irrational” because
tyrannical Arawak cacique who, because of his forcible abduction of the
bride-to-be of one of his subjects, is shown to be as justly expropriated of his
sovereignty, his lands, and his religion as Caliban is “justly” expropriated of
his in The Tempest. In both plays, therefore, the Human Other figures to the
generic human embodied in Prospero and in the Catholic king and queen
are made to embody the postulate of “significant ill” of enslavement to the
lower, sensory aspects of “human nature.” At the same time, the generic
human bearer-figures of the politically rational are made to actualize the
new, transumed formulation and its conception of freedom as having no
longer mastery over Original Sin (as well as over those Enemies-of-Christ
who as such remain enslaved to it), but rather of mastery over their own sen-
sory, irrational nature—and, as well, of all those Human Other categories
who, like Shakespeare’s Caliban and Lope de Vega’s Dulcanquellín, are stig-
matized as remaining totally enslaved to theirs.
But perhaps what Shakespeare’s Reformation play reveals, more clearly
than does Lope de Vega’s Counter Reformation one, is the profound shift in
the grounds of legitimacy of which Sepúlveda had been the proponent in the
1550s dispute with Las Casas, and that were now being instituted in early
seventeenth-century Western Europe. That is, the shift in the terms by which
the latter’s ongoing expropriation of New World lands and the subsequent
reduction of the indigenous peoples to being a landless, rightless,10 neo-serf
work force—together with the accelerated mass slave trade out of Africa to
the Americas and the Caribbean and the instituting of the large-scale slave
plantation system that that trade made possible—will be made to seem just
and legitimate to its peoples. In addition, the way in which this shift will be
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 291

linked to another shift (one by which Western Europe’s categorization of the


“Indians” and “Negroes” in now secular rather than in the earlier religious
terms of Otherness: the new terms, therefore, of Quijano’s “Racism/
Ethnicism” complex) will be effected.
As Valentin Mudimbe documents in his The Invention of Africa (1988),
beginning in 1444 with the Portuguese landfall on the shores of Senegal West
Africa, all the actions that were to be taken by European-Christians—their
enslavement of non-Christians whom they first classified in theological
terms as Enemies-of-Christ, whether those of Africa or those of the New
World, together with their expropriation of the lands of the peoples on both
continents (limitedly so, at that time, in the case of Africa; almost totally so
in the case of the Americas)—were initially seen as just and legitimate in
Christian theological terms. In these terms, all the concessions of non-
European lands by the pope to the Portuguese and Spanish sovereigns were
effected by means of several papal bulls that defined these lands as ones
that, because not belonging to a Christian prince, were terra nullius (“the
lands of no one”), and so legitimately expropriated by Christian kings
(Mudimbe 1988). In other words, they were so seen within the terms of the
adaptive truth-for of their “local culture’s” still hegemonic descriptive state-
ment of the human, and of the order of knowledge to which that statement
gave rise. And, therefore, as the truth of the “single culture” in whose theo-
centric terms they thought and acted (Epstein 1993), whose truth they
believed to be as supernaturally ordained as we now believe ours to be
“objective” because, ostensibly, supraculturally true.
This means that the large-scale accumulation of unpaid land, unpaid
labor, and overall wealth expropriated by Western Europe from non-
European peoples, which was to lay the basis of its global expansion from
the fifteenth century onwards, was carried out within the order of truth and
the self-evident order of consciousness, of a creed-specific conception of
what it was to be human—which, because a monotheistic conception, could
not conceive of an Other to what it experienced as being human, and there-
fore an Other to its truth, its notion of freedom. Its subjects could therefore
see the new peoples whom it encountered in Africa and the New World only
as the “pagan-idolators,” as “Enemies-of-Christ” as the Lack of its own nar-
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rative ideal. This was consequential. It set in motion the secularizing rein-
vention of its own matrix Christian identity as Man. The non-Europeans
that the West encountered as it expanded would classify the West as “abnor-
mal” relative to their own experienced Norm of being human, in the
Otherness slot of the gods or the ancestors. This was the case with the
Congolese who, seeing the white skin of the Europeans as a sign of mon-
strous deviance to their Bantu genre/norm of being human, classified them
together with their deceased ancestors (Axelson 1970). For the Europeans,
however, the only available slot of Otherness to their Norm, into which they
could classify these non-European populations, was one that defined the lat-
ter in terms of their ostensible subhuman status (Sahlins 1995).
The creation of this secular slot of Otherness as a replacement for the
theocentric slot of Otherness in which non-European peoples had been clas-
sified in religious terms as Enemies-of-Christ, pagan-idolators, thereby
incorporating them into the theological system of legitimacy—which, as set
out in the papal bulls from the 1455 Romanus Pontifex onwards, had pro-
vided the framework in whose terms their ostensibly “lands of no one/terra
nullius” had been seeable as justly expropriable, and they themselves justly
enslavable as such pre-classified populations—was taking place, however, in
the wider context of the overall sociopolitical and cultural transformation
that had been set in motion in Western Europe from the Renaissance
onwards, one correlated with the challenge of the then ascendant modern
European monarchical state to the centralizing post-Gregorian hegemony of
the Church.
In this context, Anthony Pagden has excellently documented the shift
that would eventually take place in the grounds of legitimacy in whose terms
Europeans were to see themselves as justly expropriating the lands and liv-
ing space of the indigenous peoples of the New World. This shift, as he
shows, would occur as a direct result of the fact that while, at first, the
Spanish state had depended on the pope’s having divided up the New World
between Spain and Portugal, doing this in exchange for the promise that
their respective states would help to further the evangelizing mission of
Christianity, the Spanish sovereigns had soon become impatient with the
papacy’s claim to temporal as well as to spiritual sovereignty. In conse-
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 293

quence, King Ferdinand of Spain, wanting to claim temporal sovereignty for


himself as he set out to institute the first Western European world empire,
had summoned several councils comprised of jurists and theologians. He
had then given them the mandate that they should come up with new
grounds for Spain’s sovereignty, which moved outside the limits of the sov-
ereignty over the temporal world claimed by the papacy.
The fact that the theological grounds of the legitimacy both of Spain’s
sovereignty over the New World and of its settlers’ rights to the indigenous
people’s lands (as well as of the latter’s right, in the early period, to carry out
slave-trading raids on the American mainland) had come upon a central
obstacle made this matter all the more urgent. The obstacle was this: all the
basic concepts of the theological system of legitimation—i.e., that the lands
of non-Christian princes were terra nullius and as such justly expropriable
by Christian princes; that the indigenous peoples could be enserfed or even
enslaved where necessary—had come to founder upon a stubborn fact. This
was that the indigenous peoples of the New World could not be classified as
Enemies-of-Christ, since Christ’s apostles had never reached the New World,
never preached the Word of the Gospel to them. Which meant that because
they could not have ever refused to hear the Word, they could not (within
the terms of the orthodox theology of the Church) be classified as Christ-
Refusers, their lands justly taken, and they themselves enslaved and/or
enserfed with a “just title.”
The life-long struggle of Bartolomé de Las Casas, the Spanish mission-
ary priest, in the wake of his 1514 conversion experience, to save the
Caribbean Arawaks from the ongoing demographic catastrophe that fol-
lowed both their infection by new diseases to which they had no immunity
and their subjection to the harsh, forced-labor regime of the Spaniards was
a struggle waged precisely on the basis of the fact that such subjection could
not be carried out with a “just title.” This was, therefore, to lead him to make
a fateful proposal, one that was to provide the charter of what was to become
the Black-diasporic presence in the Americas. This proposal was that
African slaves, whom he then believed to have been acquired with a just title,
should be brought in limited numbers as a labor force to replace the Indians.
This proposal, which kick-started what was to be the almost four-centuries-
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long slave trade out of Africa, had therefore been the result of his struggle
not to replace “Indians with Africans,” as Liberal historians who think in
biocentric, classificatory terms would have it—but rather, within the theo-
logical terms in which Las Casas thought and fought, to replace those whom
he knew from first hand to have been enslaved and enserfed outside the “just
title” terms of orthodox Christian theology with others whom, as he thought
at the time, had been acquired within the terms of those “just titles.” The
cited passage (see Las Casas guide-quote) reveals that Las Casas, when he
later found out that the African slaves had been no less ruthlessly acquired
outside the terms of the same just titles than had been the Indians, was to
bitterly repent of his proposal. But by then, the mass slave trade from Africa
across the Atlantic that would give rise to today’s transnational Black
Diaspora had taken on a life and unstoppable dynamic of its own.
Las Casas had thought and acted in the terms of his Christian evangel-
izing imperative. The Spanish state’s primary imperative, however, was that
of its territorial expansion, of realizing its imperial goals of sovereignty over
the new lands. Its jurists had, in this context, at first attempted to get around
the Enemies-of-Christ obstacle by means of a judicial document called “The
Requisition” (“Requerimento”). A hybridly theologico-juridical document,
written in Latin, the Requisition was supposed to be read out to groups of
assembled indigenes by a notary who was to accompany any slave-raiding,
land-expropriating expedition that sailed from the first settled Caribbean
islands to the mainland. This document was intended to ensure that the
indigenes in question literally heard the Word of the Christian Gospel, so
that they could then be later classified as having refused it, and therefore as
Enemies-of-Christ. The document proclaimed to the indigenes that Christ,
who was king over the world, had granted this sovereignty to the pope, who
had in turn granted the lands of their “barbarous nations” to the king of
Spain, who had sent the expedition members as his emissaries. The expedi-
tionaries had been sent to give the indigenes the choice of accepting the
king of Spain’s sovereignty over their lands, together with their acceptance
of Christ’s Word and, with it, of conversion to Christianity. If they accepted
the king’s sovereignty together with conversion, they would be unharmed.
Should they refuse (thereby making themselves Christ-Refusers and
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 295

Enemies-of-Christ), they would be attacked, captured, justly enslaved—their


lands justly expropriated. If Las Casas was to write that on reading this doc-
ument he did not know whether to laugh or cry, the reported reply by the
Cenú peoples on the mainland to one such expedition opens a transcultural
cognitive frontier onto the way in which, to use Marshall Sahlins’ phrase (if
somewhat inverting its meaning) “natives think” (Sahlins 1990), and law-
likely so within the terms of their/our order-specific modes of adaptive cog-
nition-for, truth-for.
Seen from hindsight, what the Cenú are saying (see Cenú/Greenblatt
guide-quote) is that, outside the “local cultural” field of what was then
Western Europe, and therefore outside the adaptive truth-for terms of its
monarchical-Christian genre of being human, the speech of the Requisition
was “mad and drunken”: speech that was meaningless. Since it was only in
the terms of what could seem just and legitimate to a specific genre of being
human that the lands of non-Christian and non-European peoples could
have been seen as the pope’s to give, or the king of Castile’s to take. What is
of specific interest here is not only that it was this initial, large-scale, one-
sided accumulation of lands, wealth, power, and unpaid labor by the West
that was to provide the basis for today’s 20/80 wealth and power ratio
between the world’s peoples, but also that this primary accumulation had
been effected on the basis of a truth-for, or system of ethno-knowledge, that
was no less non-veridical outside the viewpoint of its subjects than the
premise the Portuguese and Columbus’s voyages had only recently dis-
proved—i.e., the premise that the Earth was nonhomogeneously divided
into habitable within God’s Grace and uninhabitable outside it. Seeing that
what we also come upon is the nature of our human cognitive dilemma, one
that is the very condition of their/our existence as hybridly nature-culture
beings, the dilemma is how, in Epstein’s terms, we can be enabled to free
ourselves from our subordination to the one culture, the one descriptive
statement that is the condition of us being in the mode of being that we are
(Epstein 1993).
That vast dilemma, which is that of our still-unresolved issue of con-
sciousness (McGinn 1999) was one that Las Casas brilliantly touched upon
when, referring to the Aztecs’ practice of human sacrifice, he stated that a
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mistaken (i.e., adaptive) consciousness/conscience impels and obliges no


less than does a true one. However, not only the Cenú Indians, but the
Spaniards themselves had also come to realize the invalid nature of their
attempt to get around the theological concept of Enemies-of-Christ. In con-
sequence, as Pagden tells us, the Spanish Crown had, from early on, initiated
the adoption of new grounds of legitimacy that were to eventually make the
Requisition document unnecessary. The councils of jurists/theologians that
King Ferdinand set up for this purpose had come up with a formula that,
adopted from The Politics of Aristotle, would not only enable the master
trope of Nature (seen as God’s agent on Earth) to take the latter’s authorita-
tive place, but would also effect a shift from the Enemies-of-Christ/Christ-
Refusers system of classification to a new and even more powerfully
legitimating one. It was here that the modern phenomenon of race, as a new,
extrahumanly determined classificatory principle and mechanism of domi-
nation (Quijano 2000), was first invented, if still in its first religio-secular
form. For the indigenous peoples of the New World, together with the mass-
enslaved peoples of Africa, were now to be reclassified as “irrational”
because “savage” Indians, and as “subrational” Negroes, in the terms of a for-
mula based on an a-Christian premise of a by-nature difference between
Spaniards and Indians, and, by extrapolation, between Christian Europeans
and Negroes. This neo-Aristotelian formula had been proposed by the
Scottish theologian John Mair.
A new notion of the world and “idea of order” was being mapped now,
no longer upon the physical cosmos—which beginning with the fifteenth-
century voyages of the Portuguese and Columbus, as well as with the new
astronomy of Copernicus, was eventually to be freed from having to serve as
a projected “space of Otherness,” and as such having to be known in the
adaptive terms needed by human orders to represent their social structures
as extrahumanly determined ones. Instead, the projected “space of
Otherness” was now to be mapped on phenotypical and religio-cultural dif-
ferences between human variations and/or population groups, while the
new idea of order was now to be defined in terms of degrees of rational per-
fection/imperfection, as degrees ostensibly ordained by the Greco-Christian
cultural construct deployed by Sepúlveda as that of the “law of nature,” “nat-
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 297

ural law”: as a “law” that allegedly functioned to order human societies in


the same way as the newly discovered laws of nature served to regulate the
processes of functioning of physical and organic levels of reality.
It is, therefore, the very humanist strategy of returning to the pagan
thought of Greece and Rome for arguments to legitimate the state’s rise to
hegemony, outside the limits of the temporal sovereignty claimed by the
papacy, that now provides a model for the invention of a by-nature differ-
ence between “natural masters” and “natural slaves,” one able to replace the
Christian/Enemies-of-Christ legitimating difference. For while Mair does
not specifically use the term rational, the thesis of a by-nature difference in
rationality (one transumed today into a by-Evolution “difference” in a sub-
stance called I.Q.) was to be central to the new legitimation of Spain’s right
to sovereignty, as well as of its settlers’ rights both to the land and to the
labor of the Indians. With, in consequence, the institution of the
encomienda system, which attached groups of Indians to settlers as a neo-
serf form of labor, together with the institution of the slave plantation sys-
tem manned by “Negroes” coming to centrally function so as to produce and
reproduce the socioeconomic and ontological hierarchies of the order as if
indeed they had been mandated by the ostensibly extrahuman agency of
“natural law.”
For the settlers—as well as for their humanist royal historian and chap-
lain, Ginés de Sepúlveda, who defended their claims (against the opposition
of the Dominican missionaries and, centrally so, of Las Casas, who sought to
put an end to the encomienda labor system)—the vast difference that
existed in religion and culture between the Europeans and the indigenous
peoples was clear evidence of the latter’s lack of an ostensibly supracultural
natural reason. The quite Other form of life and mode of being human of the
indigenous peoples were therefore simply seen by the Spaniards as the irra-
tional Lack of their own. So that even when confronted, as in the case of the
Aztecs, with the latter’s complex and well-organized imperial civilization—
one, however, based on the central institution of large-scale human sacri-
fice—Sepúlveda was able to argue that this practice by itself was clear
evidence of the Aztecs’ lack of “natural reason”: of their having therefore
been determined by “natural law” to be the “natural slaves” of the Spaniards.
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In opposition to this thesis, and from the perspective of his own univer-
salist Christianity and evangelizing imperative, Las Casas was to put for-
ward, in his formal dispute with Sepúlveda in 1556, one of the earliest
attempts at a transcultural mode of thinking—one that was almost hereti-
cal to his own Christian religious beliefs. He had counter-argued that the
Aztec practice of human sacrifice was a religious practice that, rather than
giving proof of the Aztecs’ lack of rational reason, proved itself to be an error
of reason itself. This, given that to the Aztecs human sacrifice, “the sacrifice
of innocents for the good of the commonwealth,” was a practice that was not
only seen by them to be a legitimate, just, and rational act, but was also one
that had seemed to them to be a pious and virtuous one. In effect, an act that
had been seen as being as righteous and virtuous by the Aztecs in their
adaptive truth-for terms (based on their having mistaken, from Las Casas’s
Christian perspective, their false gods for the true One) as the Spanish set-
tlers’ expropriation of the indigenous peoples’ lands and the enserfment of
their lives/labor would come to seem just and legitimate to them within the
adaptive truth-for and incipiently secular terms of the new “reasons-of-
state” legitimation now being put forward by Sepúlveda.
The universally applicable Christianity in the terms of whose schema of
Divine Election and Damnation Las Casas waged his struggle (terms that,
once he had been informed by his fellow Portuguese missionaries of the
unjust and rapacious methods used by the Portuguese to acquire African
slaves, would lead him to confess that his proposal put his own soul in mor-
tal danger), and the identity that he had experienced as primary—that of
being a Christian (an identity that had impelled him to do “all that one ought
to as a Christian,” which for him had centrally included making use of the
state as a means of evangelizing the Indians) were increasingly being made
secondary. This at the same time as the new identity of the “political sub-
ject” (one defined by a “reasons-of-state ethic,” which instead used the
Church for its own this-worldly purpose) came to take center stage—the
new identity of which intellectuals like Sepúlveda were now the bearers.
In consequence, the humanist counter-discourse of the latter, which
functioned in the terms of this new descriptive statement and of its “rea-
sons-of-state ethic,” now became the new “common sense” (as we see it
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 299

enacted in Shakespeare’s The Tempest) of the pre-Enlightenment, pre-


Darwinian era. It was therefore within the terms of this new “common
sense”—and in the context of his defense of the settlers’ rights to the lands
and enserfed labor of the indigenous peoples, as well as of the Crown’s right
to wage just war against the latter if they resisted its sovereignty—that
Sepúlveda further elaborated Mair’s proposed legitimating of neo-
Aristotelian by-nature difference, defining it as one based not only on dif-
ferential degrees of rationality, but also as being human, of humanity.
Here we see the fatal error attendant on the West’s degodding of its reli-
gious Judeo-Christian descriptive statement of the human at its clearest.
While, as Christians, Westerners could see other peoples as also having gods
(even if, for them, necessarily “false” ones as contrasted with their “true” and
single One), as subjects defined by the identity Man, this could no longer be
the case. Seeing that once its “descriptive statement” had been instituted as
the only, universally applicable mode of being human, they would remain
unable, from then on until today, of (to paraphrase Lyotard) conceiving an
Other to what they call human (Lyotard 1990). And where the matrix
Christian conception of the human, which not only knew itself to be creed-
specific, but which had also been one carried by a Church that had been
engaged for hundreds of years in Europe itself in the Christianizing conver-
sion of pagan peoples, had compelled its missionaries to engage in tran-
screedal, transcultural modes of cognition, even where transforming the
pagan gods into the satanic figure of their Christian Devil—for the human-
ists’ “Man,” overrepresented as the supracultural, super-creedal human itself,
this was not possible. Hence the logic by which, for the humanist Sepúlveda,
the religious practices of the Aztecs were, so to speak, “crimes against
humanity,” breaches of the ostensible universally applicable “natural law,”—
a law that imposed a by-nature divide between “civilized” peoples (as true
generic humans who adhered to its Greco-European cultural construct) and
those, like the indigenous peoples of the Americas and the Caribbean, who
did not. As such, the New World peoples had to be seen and constructed,
increasingly by all Europeans, in neo-Sepúlvedan terms as forms of Human
Otherness, if to varying degrees, to a now secularizing West’s own. And while
a Las Casas, in the context of his struggle against both Mair’s and Sepúlveda’s
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theses, would see, from his own universalist-Christian perspective, that their
systemic classifying of the indigenous peoples as “by nature” different from,
and inferior to, the Spaniards, and as almost subhuman—that further, their
(in his terms) deliberate “slandering” of an entire population, of a “large part
of God’s Creation” had the directly instrumental purpose of subordinating
the peoples whom they slandered in order to expropriate their lands and to
reduce them as a population to enserfed encomienda labor (to render them,
in Peter Carlo’s term, landless and rightless)—this “slandering” was never-
theless not arbitrary.
Instead, it was a constitutive part of the new order of adaptive truth-for
that had begun to be put in place with the rise to hegemony of the modern
state, based on the new descriptive statement of the human, Man, as pri-
marily a political subject—of, therefore, the West’s own self-conception. As
a result, seen from a transcultural perspective in the context of the “local
cultural field” of a Judeo-Christian/Latin-Christian Europe that was in the
process of reinstituting itself as the secular imperial entity, the West, this
“slandering” both of Indians and of Negroes can be seen in its precise role
and function. That is, as a lawlike part of the systemic representational shift
being made out of the order of discourse that had been elaborated on the
basis of the Judeo-Christian Spirit/Flesh organizing principle (one in whose
logic the premise of nonhomogeneity, articulating its master code of sym-
bolic life and death, had been mapped onto the physical cosmos) to the new
rational/irrational organizing principle and master code. And as one whose
foundational premise of nonhomogeneity, which was now to be mapped
onto a projected, ostensibly divinely created difference of substance between
rational humans and irrational animals, would also come to be mapped at
another “space of Otherness” level. This level was that of a projected Chain
of Being comprised of differential/hierarchical degrees of rationality (and
thereby, as shown in the quote from Sepúlveda, of humanity) between dif-
ferent populations, their religions, cultures, forms of life; in other words,
their modes of being human. And while the West placed itself at the apex,
incorporating the rest (the majority of whom it would come to dominate in
terms of their differential degrees of distance from, or nearness to, its now
hegemonic, secularizing, and single own), and was to legitimate its relation
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 301

of dominance over them all in the terms of its single culture’s adaptive truth-
for, it was to be the figure of the Negro (i.e., the category comprised by all
peoples of Black African hereditary descent) that it was to place at the nadir
of its Chain of Being; that is, on a rung of the ladder lower than that of all
humans, lower even than that of Sepúlveda’s New World homunculi.
While “indios” and “negros,” Indians and Negroes, were to be both made
into the Caliban-type referents of Human Otherness to the new rational self-
conception of the West, there was also, therefore (as Poliakov notes), a
marked differential in the degrees of subrationality, and of not-quite-human-
ness, to which each group was to be relegated within the classificatory logic
of the West’s ethnocultural field. From the beginning, it would be the
“Negroes” who would be consigned to the pre-Darwinian last link in the
Chain of Being—to the “missing link” position, therefore, between rational
humans and irrational animals. And while the fact that the “Indians” were,
by the late 1530s, declared to be de jure, if not altogether de facto, free (and
as such vassals of the Crown like the Spaniards, if still secondary “native”
ones) at the same time as the “Negroes” would continue to constitute the
only outrightly enslaved labor force, and this fact was a partial cause of this
differential, there was an additional major and powerful factor. This factor
was that of the role that the black skin and somatotype of peoples of African
hereditary descent had been made to play, for centuries, in the elaboration
of monotheistic Christianity, as well as in all three monotheisms, all of which
had been religions instituted by population groups who were white-skinned,
or at least, not black-skinned. With the result that the intellectuals of these
groups, in developing the symbolic systems of their monotheistic creeds,
had come to define these symbols in the terms of their own somatotype
norm, in the same way as the Bantu-Congolese had done in developing their
polytheistic own. An account of the early seventeenth-century kingdom of
the Congo, written by a Spanish Capuchin missionary priest (Father Antonio
de Teruel), reveals the above parallel, thereby providing us with a transgenre-
of-the-human, transcultural perspective.
The indigenous peoples of the Congo,” Teruel wrote, “are all black in
color, some more so, some less so. Many are to be seen who are the color of
chestnut and some tend to be more olive-colored. But the one who is of the
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deepest black in color is held by them to be the most beautiful. Some are
born somewhat light-skinned, but as they grow older they become darker
and darker. This occurs because their mothers make use of the artifice of an
ointment . . . with which they anoint their infants, exposing them once they
have been anointed, to the rays of the sun, then leaving them there for long
periods, and repeating this action over and over . . .” (Teruel 1663‒64; empha-
sis added)

Given the fact that a black skin is so highly regarded among them, we
Europeans appear ugly in their eyes. As a result, children in those areas,
where a white has never been seen before, would become terrified, fleeing in
horror from us, no less than our children here are terrified by the sight of a
black also fleeing in horror from them. But they do not want us to call them
negroes (negros) but Blacks (Prietos); amongst them only slaves are called
negroes and thus amongst them it is the same things to say negro as to say
slave” (Teruel (1663‒1664) Ms. 3533:3574).

Unlike the Bantu-Congolese ethno-specific conception, however, the


monotheists had projected their respective creeds as universally applicable
ones, defining their God(s) and symbol systems as the only “true” ones. This
was to be even more the case with respect to Christianity from the time of
the Crusades onwards. With the result that, as the historian Fernández-
Armesto noted in his description of the “mental horizons” of Christian
Europeans at the time of their fourteenth-century expansion into the
Mediterranean, followed by their expansions into the Atlantic, in the terms
of those “horizons,” Black Africans had been already classified (and for cen-
turies before the Portuguese landing on the shores of Senegal in 1444) in a
category “not far removed from the apes, as man made degenerate by sin.”
And while the roots of this projection had come from a biblical tradition
common to all three monotheisms—that is, “that the sons of Ham were
cursed with blackness, as well as being condemned to slavery”—in Europe,
it had come to be elaborated in terms that were specific to Christianity. In
this elaboration, the “diabolical color,” black, had become the preferred color
for the depiction of “demons” and the signification of “sin“—the signifying
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 303

actualization, therefore, of Judeo-Christianity’s behavior-programming pos-


tulate of “significant ill” to its limit degree. So that as a result, in addition to
their being co-classified with apes, who “iconographically . . . signified sin,”
Black Africans were generally thought in “medieval ape lore,” a precursor to
the theory of Evolution, to be “degenerate” descendants of “true man”
(Fernández-Armesto 1987). Because all of these traditions reinforced each
other, the “descendants of Ham” classificatory category that was to be
deployed by the Europeans at the popular level, once the Enemies-of-Christ
justificatory category had been discarded as legitimation of the mass
enslavements of Africans (at the official level of Church doctrine, one of the
justifications was also that the latter’s physical enslavement was a means of
saving their souls), would be inextricably linked to Judeo-Christianity’s “for-
mulations of a general order of existence,” to its descriptive statement of
what it was to be a Christian—to be, therefore, in their own conception, the
only possible and universally applicable mode of being human, yet as a mode
which nonconsciously carried over, as the referent of “normalcy,” their own
somatotype norm in the same way as their now purely secular and biocen-
tric transformation of Christian, Man, overrepresented as if its referent were
the human, now continues to do, even more totally so.

PA R T I I I
From the Iconography of Sin and the Christian Construction
of Being to the Iconography of Irrationality and the Colonial
Construction of Being: On the Paradox of the Mutation from
Supernatural to Natural Causation.

Sepúlveda’s classification of the peoples of the Americas as homunculi,


who—when contrasted to the Spaniards in terms of prudence and reason
(ingenium)—are almost “like monkeys to men,” can be seen as transuming,
or carrying over, the residual iconography of sin into the formulation of the
new postulate of “significant ill” as that of being enslaved to the irrational
aspects of one’s nature. So that, while the iconic figure of the “ape” is main-
tained because the earlier matrix ontological distinction between the con-
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demned category of peoples enslaved to Original Sin, and the Elect category
of those redeemed from this sin has now been recast in the terms of the “by-
nature difference” of rationality, the “ape” figure will be deployed in the new
terms of a secularizing iconography as the marker of a naturally determined
zero degree of irrationality. So that, as the earlier ontological distinction
between the Elect-Redeemed and the Condemned (a distinction that had
been actualized by the relation between the category of the celibate clergy
and that of the non-celibate laity) came to be replaced by the new distinc-
tion made between those determined by nature to be the possessors of rea-
son, and those predestined by it to remain enslaved to a lack of such reason,
this distinction will be actualized in a new relation. This was the relation, in
the Americas and the Caribbean, between the European settlers classified as
by nature a people of reason (gente de razón) and the non-European popu-
lation groups “Indians” and “Negroes,” classified as “brute peoples without
“reason” who were no less naturally determined to be so. It is here, therefore,
that the figure of the Negro was now to be transferred, like that of the ape,
from the earlier iconography of sin and its postulate of “significant ill” to the
new iconography of irrationality, to its new postulate of “significant ill.” As a
result, where before the “Negro” had been projected, within the terms of the
Judeo-Christian imaginary, as the “figure” of the human made degenerate by
sin, and therefore supernaturally determined (through the mediation of
Noah’s curse laid upon the descendants of Ham) to be the nearest of all peo-
ples to the ape, now he/she will be projected as the by-nature determined
(i.e., caused) missing link between true (because rational) humans and the
irrational figure of the ape. This at the same time as inside Europe, the
increasingly interned figure of the Mad would itself come to function, within
the terms of the same iconography, as the signifier of the “significant ill” of
a threatened enslavement to irrationality in the reoccupied place of the
medieval Leper, whose figure, in a parallel way to that of the “Negro,” had
served as the intra–Christian-European signifier of the then “significant ill”
of enslavement to Original Sin.
This alerts us to the dialectic at work in the epochal shift effected by the
West from the explanatory model of supernatural causation to that of natu-
ral causation. That is, to the fact that it was the same explanatory model that
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 305

legitimated the large-scale expropriation and mass enslavement of two peo-


ples on the grounds of a naturally determined difference of rational sub-
stance between them and their expropriators and slave masters that had, at
the same time, made possible the rise and development of the physical sci-
ences as a new order of human cognition. This meant that the same model
that was to initiate the centuries-long degradation of two human groups for
the benefit of another such group was to also set in motion the process that
would emancipate the “objective set of facts” of the physical level of reality
from having to be known in the adaptive truth-for terms in which it had been
hitherto known by all human population groups. This had been so known, in
exactly the same way as “Indians” and “Negroes” were now going to be
“known” by Europeans, as an indispensable function of the mechanisms by
means of which, as Godelier points out, all human groups have been enabled
to make the fact that it is they/we who are the authors and agents of our own
orders opaque to themselves/ourselves. Since they are mechanisms that func-
tion to project their/our authorship onto Imaginary supernatural Beings, as
well as to represent the latter as being as much the creators of the physical
cosmos onto which each order mapped its structuring principles, descriptive
statement of the human, and correlated moral laws as they are of the sub-
jects, who ostensibly merely mirror these laws in the organization of their/our
own social hierarchies, divisions of labor, and role allocations.
Hence the logic by which, if the Copernican Revolution was to be only
made possible by the West’s invention of Man outside the terms of the ortho-
dox, “sinful by nature” descriptive statement and theocentric conception of
the human, Christian, this was to be only fully effected by the parallel inven-
tion/instituting of the new categories that were to serve as the physical ref-
erents of Man’s Human Other. With the result that the same explanatory
model that legitimated the expropriation and internment of the Indians, the
mass enslavement of the Negroes, and the internment of the Mad—all osten-
sibly as living proof of their naturally determined enslavement to irrational-
ity—will also underlie the cognitively emancipatory shift from the
explanatory model of supernatural causation to that of natural causation,
which made the natural sciences possible. The shift, therefore, from the
explanatory principle of Divine Providence and/or retribution, as well as
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from that of witchcraft and sorcery, to that of the new principle of laws of
nature, of events happening cursus solitus naturae (in the accustomed or
ordinary course of nature) as the explanatory model that underlay the sci-
entific revolution, both with respect to the physical sciences and, if more
slowly so, to the rise of modern medicine.
However, at the same time as the West initiated the process by means of
which the projection of extrahuman causation could no longer be mapped,
in good faith, on the physical levels of reality, it would also begin, in the wake
of its reinventing of its descriptive statement as that of Man in its first form,
to identify as its Imaginary extrahuman Being the figure of “Nature,” now
represented as the authoritative agent on earth of a God who, having created
it, has now begun to recede into the distance. So that as the earlier
Spirit/Flesh master code was being relegated to a secondary and increas-
ingly privatized space, the new rational/irrational master code, which was
to be the structuring of the rearranged hierarchies of the now centralized
political order of the modern state, was being projected upon another “space
of Otherness.” This was that of the projected hierarchy of a graduated table,
or Chain of all forms of sentient life, from those classified as the lowest to
those as the highest. It is, therefore, as the new rational/irrational line
(drawn between the fundamental ontological distinction of a represented
nonhomogeneity between divinely created-to-be-rational humans, on the
one hand, and divinely created-to-be irrational animals, on the other) comes
to be actualized in the institutionalized differences between European set-
tlers and Indians/Negroes, that the figure of the Negro as the projected miss-
ing link between the two sides of the rational/irrational divide will inevitably
come to be represented in the first “scientific” taxonomy of human popula-
tions, that of Linnaeus, as the population that, in contrast to the European
(which is governed by laws), is governed by caprice (Linnaeus 1735). So irra-
tional that it will have to be governed by others.
In consequence, and as Poliakov argues in The Aryan Myth (1974), it is
the population group classified as “Negro” by the West who would be made
to pay the most total psycho-existential price for the West’s epochal degod-
ding of both its matrix Judeo-Christian identity and the latter’s projection of
Otherness. Since, if that process called for the carrying over or transuming
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 307

(Bloom 1983) of the monotheistic macro-stereotype of all Black peoples as


descendants of Noah’s son Ham (whom he had cursed, condemning his
descendants to be the servants to the descendants of those of his two other
sons, Japhet and Shem), and its reattachment to the new concept of the sub-
rational Negro, condemned this time by the malediction of Nature rather
than by Noah, this was because, in both cases, that stereotype had become
indispensable to the mechanisms by which the Judeo-Christian West
enacted its descriptive statement of the human—firstly as Christian, then as
its first hybridly religio-secular variant, Man.
This in the same way in which it would remain indispensable to the
enacting of the descriptive statement of the now purely secular because bio-
centric Darwinian variant of Man: one in which the Human Other maledic-
tion or curse, one shared with all the now colonized nonwhite peoples
classified as “natives” (but as their extreme nigger form) would be no longer
that of Noah or Nature, but of Evolution and Natural Selection. So that what-
ever the terms of derogatory clichés of which both the native and the “Negro”
are the butt, what is clear is that its obsessive “name of what is evil” stereo-
typing functions as an indispensable part of the Godelier-type mechanism
by which the subjects of the West (including those subjects like ourselves
whom it has “westernized” and “modernized”) are enabled to make opaque
to themselves/ourselves (according to the same nature-culture laws by
which the subjects of all other human orders have done and do the same)
the empirical fact of our ongoing production and reproduction of our order,
of its genre of being human, its mode of consciousness or mind, and there-
fore of the latter’s adaptive truth-for. We are, as intellectuals, the agents of
its formal elaboration.
The first form of the secularizing, “name of what is evil,” stereotyped role
of the “Negro” was, however, different from the form it now takes. Poliakov
links that first form, and the conceptual imaginative terms it would take, to
a shift in the role played by that other major Other figure to the Judeo-
Christian identity, the Jew. This shift began with the rise of the modern state
in Spain, together with the centralizing of its order, from 1492 onwards. In
that year, all Jews who adhered to their religion of Judaism were expelled,
while shortly after, the conquered Islamic Moors of southern Spain began to
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be forcibly converted to Christianity—both as effects of the goal of “religious


unification” that was to be the basis of the monarchical order of Spain. In
consequence, Poliakov points out—because a great number of Jews had
accepted conversion to Christianity, rather than being expelled—the impo-
sition of a single orthodox faith, that of Christianity, under the aegis of the
Inquisition as an agent of the new state had given rise to the problem of the
conversos or converts, either Moriscos (Muslim converts) or Marranos
(Jewish converts). It was, therefore, in the context of the shift from being a
primarily religious subject, for whom the “name of what is evil” was/is that
of a common enslavement by all mankind to Original Sin, to that of being a
political subject of a state (yet unified on the basis of its Christian creed)
that the Other to the norm of this subject was to be the category of the con-
versos, both Marranos and Moriscos. A specific reprobation was therefore
now placed on these two categories: that of their impurity or uncleanness of
blood, and also of their faith, because descended from ancestors who had
practiced the Jewish and the Islamic creeds.
If, as Harold Bloom notes, cultural fields are kept in being by transump-
tive chains (Bloom 1982), it was to be the trope of “purity of blood,” together
with that of its threatening “stain” (itself a “re-troped” form of the matrix
negative construct of the “taint” of Original Sin) that, once re-troped as
“racial purity,” would come to be attached to peoples of Black African hered-
itary descent. With the result that if the latter would (together with a range
of other nonwhite “natives”) come to reoccupy the now purely secular place
that had been earlier occupied by the Marrano and Morisco, the deep-seated
belief in the pollution carried by their “negro blood” would lead to the theme
of miscegenation coming to reoccupy the earlier foundational place that the
incest had taken in all other human orders (Fox 1983). This at the same time
as all members of this population were now to be constructed, discursively
and institutionally, as the bottom marker—not now merely on a local scale,
such as that of the “clean” Spanish-Christian scale of being, but instead of
what was to become, from Sepúlveda onwards, that of a projected univer-
sally human scale of being. With this being so, whether in the terms of the
Enlightenment’s “Nature,” or even more totally so in terms of the Darwinian
paradigm of Evolution.
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 309

What Poliakov reveals here, therefore, is the nonarbitrary and systemic


nature of the way in which the range of negatively marked tropes attached to
the “figure” of the “Negro” were/are only the contemporary culmination of a
process by means of which, beginning early on in the sixteenth century, a pro-
jected taxonomy of human population groups had begun to be put in place—
one in which the “Negro” had to be, imperatively, at the bottom. Beginning
with Peter Martyr’s 1516 definition of Indians as “white,” as contrasted with
“black” Ethiopians, this placing was carried over in the first attempt at “racial
classification” by François Bernier in 1684, which also assimilated the Indians
to the white race now projected as the normal race. While the parallel sys-
temic construction of the Black as the “abnormal” race can be seen in the
generalization of the positive/negative value meanings (common to all
European languages) as between mestizo (white/Indian) and mulatto
(white/Black). What Poliakov further demonstrates is that, in the same way
as the systemic construction of Moriscos and Marranos was an indispensa-
ble function of the inscripting and instituting of the norm subject of the
Spanish religio-political monarchical state as a “clean” and therefore rational
subject (rather than, as before, a subject seeking to be spiritually redeemed),
so it is to be with respect to the role of the Black Other in the construction
of Europeans as racially “pure,” secular subjects. In that, beginning with the
West’s expansion in the fifteenth century, it would be the Black population
group whose discursive and institutional degradation as the new ne plus
ultra marker of barely human status (whether in the terms of Man1 or of
Man2) was to be an indispensable function of the enacting of the descriptive
statements by means of which the West was to effect its epochal de-super-
naturalization of its matrix mode of being human. As redescriptions, that is,
by means of which it would open the frontier onto natural-scientific knowl-
edge, both of the physical and (after Darwin) of the biological levels of real-
ity, at the same time as these redescriptions were to lead directly to the
present “Two Cultures” divide of our contemporary order of knowledge.
So that if Darwin’s redescription of the human in now purely secular
terms, and his deconstruction of the rational/irrational master code
mapped on to a projected Chain of Being of all forms of sentient life, was to
make possible the rise and development of the biological sciences, on the
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one hand—it was, on the other, to provide the “new” ground for this “Two
Cultures” organization/order of knowledge. That is, as one whose discipli-
nary fields were to be all based on the new description of the human as a
purely biocentric being, and in whose terms not only the peoples of the
Black Diaspora, but this time the peoples of Black Africa itself (as well as
their continent, Africa), together with all the colonized dark-skinned
“natives” of the world and the darker-skinned and poorer European peoples
themselves,11 were now to find themselves/ourselves as discursively and
institutionally imprisoned as the Indians, the Negroes-as-slaves and the
Mad had been discursively and institutionally imprisoned in the terms of
the descriptive statement of the earlier form of Man1.
This principle, that of bio-evolutionary Natural Selection, was now to
function at the level of the new bourgeois social order as a de facto new
Argument-from-Design—one in which while one’s selected or dysselected
status could not be known in advance, it would come to be verified by one’s
(or one’s group’s) success or failure in life. While it was to be in the terms of
this new Argument, with its postulate of the no less extrahuman (because
bio-evolutionarily determined) ordering of our contemporary social and
economic order, that the extreme situation both of the darker-skinned
“natives” and of the Black in the West’s new conception of the human was,
as it still continues to be, both discursively and institutionally constructed.
With this construction serving as an indispensable function of the contin-
ued production and reproduction of our still hegemonic biocentric and eth-
noclass descriptive statement of the human, Man, as the first represented to
be a universally applicable “descriptive statement” of the human, because
overrepresented as being isomorphic with the being of being human itself—
and dependent, for its enactment, on a new “space of Otherness” principle
of nonhomogeneity in the reoccupied place of the earlier rational/irrational
line. This principle would be embodied in the new line that W. E. B. Dubois
was to identify as the Color Line: that is, as a line drawn between the lighter
and the darker peoples of the earth, and enforced at the level of social real-
ity by the lawlikely instituted relation of socioeconomic dominance/subor-
dination between them. With this line being as centrally a function of the
enacting of our present biocentric, descriptive statement of the human as
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 311

(in the medieval order of Latin-Christian Europe) the institutionally and dis-
cursively enforced line drawn between the categories of the clergy and the
laity had been a central function of the enacting of the then theocentric
genre or descriptive statement of the human.

PA RT I V
From the Degodding of the Descriptive Statement to its
De-biologizing, from Natural to Nature-Culture Causation:
The Sixties, the Multiple Challenges to “Man,” and the
Colonial/Native/Negro/Third-World Questions, as the Genre
or the Assuming-of-”Man”-to-Be-the-Human Issue.

What is by common consent called the human sciences have their own
drama . . . [A]ll these discoveries, all these inquiries lead only in one direc-
tion: to make man admit that he is nothing, absolutely nothing—and that he
must put an end to the narcissism on which he relies in order to imagine that
he is different from the other “animals.” . . . This amounts to nothing more
nor less than man’s surrender. . . . Having reflected on that, I grasp my nar-
cissism with both hands and I turn my back on the degradation of those who
would make man a mere mechanism. . . . And truly what is to be done is to
set man free.
—Frantz Fanon, Black Skins, White Masks

Here the Argument returns to Margaret Boden’s point about the principal
metaphysical significance of artificial intelligence (Boden 1977), linking it to
Nicholas Humphrey’s distinction between the “objective” set of facts “out
there” and the way each organism—or (as the Argument’s extension of his
thesis puts it, each genre-of-the-human)—must lawlikely know its reality
primarily with reference to its own adaptively advantageous production/
reproduction as such a mode of being. Thus, what the range of anticolonial
movements at the level of the global (as well the multiple) social movements
internal to the United States and other First-World countries that took place
during the fifties and sixties fundamentally revealed was the gap that exists
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between our present “mental construction of reality” as one projected from


the perspective (and to the adaptive advantage) of our present ethnoclass
genre of the human, Man, and its biocentric descriptive statement, and the
way our global social reality veridically is out there; that is, outside the view-
point of ethnoclass Man—of its genre of being, of truth, of freedom—as all
three are articulated in the disciplines of our present epistemological order
and its biocentric disciplinary discourses. The literary scholar Wlad Godzich
first made this point, if in somewhat different terms, when he wrote in 1986
on the great impact of the sociopolitical upheavals of the late fifties and six-
ties, particularly decolonization and liberation movements. And although
most of the new theoretical departures, he would add, were to be quickly
reterritorialized and re-coopted back into the mainstream orthodoxies of
our present disciplines, the fact is that (as noted earlier) some aspects of this
initial impact have remained (Godzich 1980).
That one of the central remaining manifestations of this impact was to
be that of feminist studies was due to a fundamental fact. This was that of
the way in which while before the sixties, the issues with which women were
concerned had been addressed only in the context of the Woman’s Question
of the Marxist paradigm (as, at that time, the only paradigm concerned with
the relation between knowledge and human emancipation), in the wake of
the sixties, women activists had ceased their earlier “echoing” of Marxist
thought and had redefined the Woman’s Question into an issue that was spe-
cific to their own concerns, rather than as merely being, as before, a subset
of what might be called the Labor Issue. Renaming themselves feminists,
they had redescribed their issue as that of gender and sexism, thereby tar-
geting the deconstruction of the social phenomenon of patriarchy as their
goal, rather than the mode-of-economic-production target of the Marxian
Labor issue. This has not been the case, however, with the issues that before
the sixties had been known as the Colonial Question, the “Native” (i.e. non-
white) and the Negro Question—all of which had been, like the Woman’s
Question, subsets of the Marxian Labor issue. This in spite of the fact that
at the empirical level, it was the multiple movements related to these ques-
tions that had most forcibly erupted in concrete political and social strug-
gles all over the globe, as well as internally in the United States.
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 313

The Argument proposes, on the basis of the first part of its title, that all
of these Questions, ones that in the wake of the attaining of political inde-
pendence by the former colonies or of the ending of segregation in the
United States would come to be labeled instead as the Third-World and
“Minority” Questions, now need to be redescribed in the terms of an issue
that is specific to them—yet one that has hitherto had no name, seeing that
it cannot exist as an “object of knowledge” within the terms of our present
order of knowledge any more than, as Foucault points out, biological life
could have existed as an object of knowledge in the classical (and in my
terms, the pre-bourgeois) episteme. This issue is that of the genre of the
human, the issue whose target of abolition is the ongoing collective produc-
tion of our present ethnoclass mode of being human, Man: above all, its
overrepresentation of its well-being as that of the human species as a whole,
rather than as it is veridically: that of the Western and westernized (or con-
versely) global middle classes.
The paradox with which we are confronted here is the following: that in
the wake of the intellectual revolution of the Renaissance, as carried out in
large part by the lay humanists of the Renaissance on the basis of their reval-
orized redescription of the human as the rational, political subject, Man—
on the basis, as Jacob Pandian points out, of their parallel invention of Man’s
Human Others—Western intellectuals were to gradually emancipate knowl-
edge of the physical cosmos from having to be known in the adaptive, order-
maintaining terms in which it had hitherto been known by means of the rise
and development of the physical sciences. This meant that increasingly, and
for all human groups, the physical cosmos could no longer come to be validly
used for such projections. Instead, the West’s new master code of
rational/irrational nature was now to be mapped onto a projected Chain of
Being of organic forms of life, organized about a line drawn between, on the
one hand, divinely created-to-be-rational humans, and on the other, no less
divinely created-to-be-irrational animals; that is, on what was still adaptively
known through the classical discipline of “natural history” as a still super-
naturally determined and created “objective set of facts.” This “space of
Otherness” line of nonhomogeneity had then functioned to validate the
socio-ontological line now drawn between rational, political Man (Prospero,
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the settler of European descent) and its irrational Human Others (the cate-
gories of Caliban [i.e., the subordinated Indians and the enslaved Negroes]),
in exactly the same way as, before Copernicus, the “space of Otherness” pro-
jection of a nonhomogeneity of substance between the perfection of the
celestial realm and the degradation of the terrestrial had reciprocally bol-
stered and validated the Spirit/Flesh code as enacted in the ontological
value difference between clergy and laity within the terms of Judeo-
Christianity’s matrix formulation of a “general order of existence.” In the
same way, therefore, as in the order of knowledge of pre-Newtonian Europe,
all knowledge of the astronomy of the universe had had, however technically
sophisticated and whatever its predictive power, to remain couched in
ethno-astronomical terms, so all pre-Darwinian knowledge of organic life
had had to be conceptualized in the terms of a (so to speak) proto- or ethno-
biology.
The biological sciences were therefore to come into existence only in the
wake of the second act of redescription effected during the nineteenth cen-
tury by Liberal humanist intellectuals—as a redescription by means of
which the still hybridly religio-secular political subject conception of the
human, Man (as embodied in Prospero) was redefined as optimally eco-
nomic Man, at the same time as this Man was redefined by Darwin as a
purely biological being whose origin, like that of all other species, was sited
in Evolution, with the human therefore existing in a line of pure continuity
with all other organic forms of life. A mutation had thereby occurred, in that
Darwin, by means of his deconstruction of the Chain of Being that had been
earlier mapped onto the rational human/irrational animals line, had begun
the emancipation of the human knowledge of the purely biological level of
reality from having to be known in genre-specific adaptive terms, thereby
giving rise to the biological sciences and to its contemporary, dazzling tri-
umphs—as, for example, the cracking of the DNA code, the Human Genome
Project, together with the utopian cum dystopian promises and possibilities
of biotechnology.
It can be seen in hindsight that the “space of Otherness” which had been
projected both upon the heavens as well as upon organic life, had been a
central function of the Godelier-type mechanisms by means of which, as
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 315

humans, we keep our own authorship and agency opaque to ourselves, in


that the respective codes that had been mapped upon them (i.e., that of
Redeemed Spirit/Fallen Flesh, then that of rational nature [redeemed from
irrationality] and irrational nature [enslaved to irrationality]) had both
played a central analogical status-ordering and thereby system-maintaining
role for their respective social systems: firstly, that of Latin-Christian Europe,
followed by that of the monarchical (whether absolute or constitutionally
limited) order of the landed-gentry West. Analogical in the sense that it was
their “space of Otherness” projection that had induced the subjects of both
of these orders to both know and experience their societies’ respective role
allocation, social hierarchies, divisions of labor, and ratio-proportional dis-
tribution of their goods and their bads as being supernaturally preor-
dained—as, in their respective ethno-knowledges, both the projected
difference of ontological substance between heaven and earth (Spirit/Flesh)
in the first case, and in the second, that between rational humans and irra-
tional animals, had been divinely created to be. With the status-ordering
principles generated from their respective codes—one based on ostensibly
differential degrees of enslavement to sin/redemption from sin, the other on
ostensibly differential degrees of rational nature/enslavement to irrational
nature—thereby inducing the subjects of these orders to experience their
own placement in the structuring hierarchies of the order as having been
extrahumanly (in these two cases supernaturally) designed and/or deter-
mined, rather than as veridically or systemically produced by our collective
human agency.
The Argument proposes that the new master code of the bourgeoisie
and of its ethnoclass conception of the human—that is, the code of selected
by Evolution/dysselected by Evolution—was now to be mapped and
anchored on the only available “objective set of facts” that remained. This
was the set of environmentally, climatically determined phenotypical dif-
ferences between human hereditary variations as these had developed in
the wake of the human diaspora both across and out of the continent of
Africa; that is, as a set of (so to speak) totemic differences, which were now
harnessed to the task of projecting the Color Line drawn institutionally and
discursively between whites/nonwhites—and at its most extreme between
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the Caucasoid physiognomy (as symbolic life, the name of what is good, the
idea that some humans can be selected by Evolution) and the Negroid phys-
iognomy (as symbolic death, the “name of what is evil,” the idea that some
humans can be dysselected by Evolution)—as the new extrahuman line, or
projection of genetic nonhomogeneity that would now be made to function,
analogically, as the status-ordering principle based upon ostensibly differ-
ential degrees of evolutionary selectedness/eugenicity and/or dysselected-
ness/dysgenicity. Differential degrees, as between the classes (middle and
lower and, by extrapolation, between capital and labor) as well as between
men and women, and between the heterosexual and homosexual erotic
preference—and, even more centrally, as between Breadwinner ( job-
holding middle and working classes) and the jobless and criminalized Poor,
with this rearticulated at the global level as between Sartre’s “Men” and
Natives (see his guide-quote), before the end of politico-military colonial-
ism, then postcolonially as between the “developed” First World, on the one
hand, and the “underdeveloped” Third and Fourth Worlds on the other. The
Color Line was now projected as the new “space of Otherness” principle of
nonhomogeneity, made to reoccupy the earlier places of the motion-filled
heavens/non-moving Earth, rational humans/irrational animal lines, and
to recode in new terms their ostensible extrahumanly determined differ-
ences of ontological substance. While, if the earlier two had been indispen-
sable to the production and reproduction of their respective genres of being
human, of their descriptive statements (i.e., as Christian and as Man1), and
of the overall order in whose field of interrelationships, social hierarchies,
system of role allocations, and divisions of labors each such genre of the
human could alone realize itself—and with each such descriptive state-
ment therefore being rigorously conserved by the “learning system” and
order of knowledge as articulated in the institutional structure of each
order—this was to be no less the case with respect to the projected “space
of Otherness” of the Color Line. With respect, that is, to its indispensability
to the production and reproduction of our present genre of the human
Man2, together with the overall global/national bourgeois order of things
and its specific mode of economic production, alone able to provide the
material conditions of existence for the production and reproduction of the
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 317

ethnoclass or Western-bourgeois answer that we now give to the question


of the who and what we are.
It is in this context that the Negro, the Native, the Colonial Questions,
and postcolonially the “Underdeveloped” or Third/Fourth-Worlds Question
can be clearly seen to be the issue, not of our present mode of economic pro-
duction, but rather of the ongoing production and reproduction of this
answer—that is, our present biocentric ethnoclass genre of the human, of
which our present techno-industrial, capitalist mode of production is an
indispensable and irreplaceable, but only a proximate function. With this
genre of the human being one in the terms of whose dually biogenetic and
economic notions of freedom both the peoples of African hereditary descent
and the peoples who comprise the damned archipelagoes of the Poor, the
jobless the homeless, the “underdeveloped” must lawlikely be sacrificed as a
function of our continuing to project our collective authorship of our con-
temporary order onto the imagined agency of Evolution and Natural
Selection and, by extrapolation, onto the “Invisible Hand” of the “Free
Market” (both being cultural and class-specific constructs).
The challenge to be confronted at this conjuncture is this: While from
the Renaissance onwards, Western intellectuals have, by means of the devel-
opment of the natural sciences, enabled us to obtain nonadaptive knowl-
edge of our nonhuman levels of reality, we have hitherto had no such parallel
knowledge with respect to ourselves and the nature-culture laws that gov-
ern our modes of being, of behaving, of mind, or of minding. The buck for
such knowledge (one able to open up a new frontier of nonadaptive human
self-cognition, and therefore the possibility of our nonheteronomously and
now consciously ordered/motivated behaviors, beyond the ethnoclass limits
of our contemporary ones) stops with us. While the prescriptive guidelines
of how we are to set about this challenge lie in the paradox of the new
Darwinian descriptive statement of the human: Man in its second, purely
secular, biocentric, and overrepresented modality of being human. What
then had been the contradiction at the heart of the Darwinian Revolution,
at the core of its paradigm of Evolution that was to give rise to, on the one
hand, the continuing dazzling successes of the biological sciences and, on
the other, not only to the obsessive ethno-biological beliefs in the genetic
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inferiority of nonwhite natives, in the barely evolved near-primate status of


black-skinned peoples (as matrix beliefs that would logically make possible
the “life unworthy of life” extermination credo of the Nazis), but also at the
same time to C. P. Snow’s “Two Cultures” division of knowledge? That is, to
the natural-scientific disciplines on the one hand, and to the rigorous yet
adaptive, and therefore ethno-disciplines of the humanities and social sci-
ences on the other?
Although Foucault, in his analysis of the processes by means of which
the classical episteme was replaced by our own, had proposed that these
epistemes be seen as being discontinuous with each other, what he oversaw
was that such a discontinuity, like the earlier discontinuity that had been
effected by the classical episteme itself, was taking place in the terms of a
continuous cultural field, one instituted by the matrix Judeo-Christian for-
mulation of a general order of existence. That, therefore, these shifts in epis-
temes were not only shifts with respect to each episteme’s specific order of
knowledge/truth, but were also shifts in what can now be identified as the
“politics of being”; that is, as a politics that is everywhere fought over what
is to be the descriptive statement, the governing sociogenic principle, insti-
tuting of each genre of the human. With the result that as Christian becomes
Man1 (as political subject), then as Man1 becomes Man2 (as a bio-economic
subject), from the end of the eighteenth century onwards, each of these new
descriptive statements will nevertheless remain inscribed within the frame-
work of a specific secularizing reformulation of that matrix Judeo-Christian
Grand Narrative. With this coming to mean that, in both cases, their epis-
temes will be, like their respective genres of being human, both discontinu-
ous and continuous.
This was the fact that Jacob Pandian brought to our attention when he
noted that the Untrue Christian Self as the Other to the True Christian Self
of the Judeo-Christian conception was to be re-inscripted, from the six-
teenth century onwards, as the new Untrue Human Others to the “true”
human that is Man, in its two forms. Firstly as subrational Indian, Negro
Others to Man1, then, secondly, as native and nigger Others to Man2. It is
with this proposal that he also provides the answer to the why of the imper-
ative signifying role that will continue to be placed by the secular West upon
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 319

what seems to its subjects, from the perspective of their somatic norm, to be
the alien features of the Negroid physiognomy. The answer also as to the why
the negative connotations that will continue to be placed on it should, while
now effected in purely biologized terms, still carry over, if in new post-six-
ties terms, the “undeserving” “name of what is evil” ordering principle that
still reenacts the matrix stigma that had been placed by medieval
Christianity on the Negroid physiognomy (Gans 1999). With the conse-
quence that because now made to embody and actualize the example of the
human, not now as fallen to the status of the ape, but rather as barely evolved
from it (and, as such, an undeserving race because dysselected-by-Evolution
within the logic of the Darwinian paradigm), it was now not only the peo-
ples of the Black ex-slave Diaspora, but all the peoples of Black Africa who
would be also compelled to confront the inescapable fact (one attested to by
the infamous 41-bullet shooting death of Amadou Diallo) that, as put suc-
cinctly by Frantz Fanon, “wherever he[/she] goes in the world, the Negro
remains a Negro” (Fanon 1967)—and, as such, made to reoccupy the signi-
fying place of medieval/Latin-Christian Europe’s fallen, degraded, and
thereby nonmoving Earth.
The Argument here redefines Marx’s class struggle in the terms of a “pol-
itics of being”: that is, one waged over what is to be the descriptive state-
ment of the human, about whose master code of symbolic life and death
each human order organizes itself. It then proposes that it was precisely
because of the above political dynamic—which underpinned the Darwinian
Revolution, making it possible—that it was also compelled to function as a
half-scientific, half-mythic theory of origins, at least as it had to do with the
human. Since it was to be in the context of the political struggle for hege-
mony that was being waged by a then increasingly wealthy but non-landed
bourgeoisie against the established ruling elite of the landed gentry elite that
Darwin would be impelled to put forward a new theory with respect to the
origin of all species, including the human species (one able to move outside
the terms of the “Argument from Divine Design”), that had functioned to
legitimate both the ruling status of the landed gentry and the order of knowl-
edge of the classical episteme, and that had provided the mode of adaptive
truth-for indispensable to the legitimation of the ruling gentry’s hegemony.
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It was in order to deconstruct the “Argument from Divine Design” that


Darwin was to put forward his brilliantly innovative new paradigm that
would lead to the rise and development of the biological sciences, at the
same time as it would also elaborate a new origin narrative in place of
Genesis (Isaacs 1983).
Blumenberg reveals the central role that will be played in this reformu-
lation by the clergyman-economist Thomas Malthus (Blumenberg 1983).
This is the new form of the “absence of order” that Malthus will elaborate in
his 1798 Essay on the Principle of Population. For Malthus, it is the
“autonomous lawfulness of population growth,” projected as a “universal law
of life,” which predetermines a new modality of the “absence of order”: this
time, the ostensibly fundamental contradiction posed by the fact that men’s
increase in numbers is a geometric progression, whereas the increase in the
quantity of food can only be an arithmetical progression. With the result
that given the widening gap between the two progressions, the law of self-
regulation that follows logically calls for the state’s noninterference with the
ostensibly extrahuman regulatory effect of the supposed “law of nature”—a
law that also calls for the category of the Poor to be left by themselves,
unaided by any measures taken by the state, in order that its members can
be weeded out by the “iron laws” of nature. What Malthus puts in place,
therefore, is the second transumed reformulation of the matrix Judeo-
Christian formulation. Enslavement here is no longer to Original Sin, or to
one’s irrational nature—with, in the case of the latter, the threat or “signifi-
cant ill” of the political state falling into the chaos and nonpredictability of
a state-of-nature. Rather, enslavement is now to the threat of Malthusian
overpopulation, to its concomitant “ill” of Natural Scarcity whose imperative
“plan of salvation” would now be postulated in economic terms as that of
keeping this at bay—of material, in the place of the matrix spiritual,
Redemption.
The above reformulations were all part of the then intellectuals’ struggle
to redescribe both the human, and its human activity, outside the terms of
the description of the human on whose basis the owners of landed wealth
had based their hegemony. What is usually overlooked, however, is that their
redescription will be one that carried in its turn a new descriptive statement
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 321

able to legitimate the rise to hegemony of the non-landed, capital-owning


bourgeoisie as the new ruling elite. While it will be in the lineaments of the
new criteria defining of Man2, in the terms of this new descriptive statement,
that the lineaments of its negative Human Others are also already outlined.
Seeing that if at one level Man2 is now defined as a jobholding Breadwinner,
and even more optimally, as a successful “masterer of Natural Scarcity”
(Investor, or capital accumulator), what might be called the archipelago of
its modes of Human Otherness can no longer be defined in the terms of the
interned Mad, the interned “Indian,” the enslaved “Negro” in which it had
been earlier defined. Instead, the new descriptive statement of the human
will call for its archipelago of Human Otherness to be peopled by a new cat-
egory, one now comprised of the jobless, the homeless, the Poor, the sys-
temically made jobless and criminalized—of the “underdeveloped”—all as
the category of the economically damnés (Fanon 1963), rather than, as
before, of the politically condemned. With the result that if inside Europe, it
will be the Poor who will be made to reoccupy the earlier proscribed interned
places of the Leper and the Mad, in the Euro-Americas, it is the freed Negro,
together with the Indians interned in reservations, or as peons on hacien-
das, who will now be interned in the new institution of Poverty/Joblessness.
That is, in an institution now made to actualize the idea of the human
overcome by Natural Scarcity, and therefore in the process of being swept
away by Malthus’s “iron laws of nature,” because unable, as the regular job-
holding Breadwinners and Investors are so clearly able to do, to master the
“ill” of this scarcity. This at the same time, as Fanon shows in The Wretched
of the Earth, as the “native” rural agro-proletariat interned in colonial insti-
tutions would be made to actualize the category most totally condemned to
poverty and joblessness, ostensibly because of the represented bio-evolu-
tionarily determined incapacity of its members to do otherwise. Since, like
the medieval Leper, whose proscribed role had called for him/her to actual-
ize the realization of the effects of mankind’s enslavement to Original Sin, so
this new archipelago of Otherness will be made to signify the realization of
the new reformulation’s posited “absence of order,” or postulate of “signifi-
cant ill,” defined now in economic terms. And “curable,” therefore, only in
economic terms.
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What can be seen as at work here is the positive aspect of the political
project that, however nonconsciously so, drove Darwin’s intellectual enter-
prise. In that it is going to be in the wider context of the intellectual revolu-
tion of Liberal or economic (rather than civic) political humanism that is
being brought in from the end of the eighteenth century onwards by the
intellectuals of the bourgeoisie, together with their redefinition of Man1 in
the purely secular and now biocentric terms of Man2 that these new sciences
are going to be made possible. Since the new genre of being human, in its
now purely degodded conception, is one that no longer needs to know the
world of organic life in the ostensibly supernaturally ordered, adaptive truth-
for terms in which it had to be known by the subject-bearers of Man1—as it
had been known, therefore, in the terms of Foucault’s classical episteme,
with these terms serving to validate the hegemony of the owners of landed
rather than of moveable wealth, or capital. Yet it is also in the terms of this
specific political project that the fundamental paradox of the Darwinian
Revolution emerges, one that links the imperatively secured bottom role of
the Black Diaspora peoples—as well as the systemic expendability of the
global Poor, of the jobless, the homeless, the underdeveloped—to the issue
raised earlier with respect to the imperative “Two Culture” organization of
our present order of knowledge.
To sum up: it is in this context that a new principle of nonhomogeneity,
that of Dubois’s Color Line in its white/nonwhite, Men/Natives form (i.e., as
drawn between the lighter and the darker races), will now be discursively
and institutionally deployed as a “space of Otherness” on which to project an
imagined and extrahumanly (because ostensibly bio-evolutionarily) deter-
mined nonhomogeneity of genetic substance between the category of those
selected-by-Evolution and the category of those dysselected-by-Evolution.
The Color (cum Colonial) Line would, therefore, be made to reoccupy the
places earlier occupied by the Heaven/Earth, supralunar/sublunar, and by
the rational humans/irrational animals premises of nonhomogeneity in
order to enable the selected/dysselected, and thus deserving/undeserving
status organizing principle that it encoded to function for the nation-state
as well as the imperial orders of the Western bourgeoisie, in the same way as
Jacques Le Goff documents the enslaved to the flesh/Redeemed-in-the-
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 323

Spirit, deserving/undeserving status-organizing principle had functioned


for the ecclesiastical-cum-medieval aristocratic order of Latin-Christian
Europe (Le Goff 1988). So that where the ranking rule of superiority/inferi-
ority accepted and internalized by all the subjects of the medieval order of
Europe had been that of differential degrees of redemption from enslave-
ment to the Fallen Flesh, degrees therefore of religious merit (with the
“learned” scholars of the order, as Le Goff points out, obsessively priding
themselves on their ability to keep themselves chaste and sexually continent
on feast days, at the same time as they stigmatized the peasants as people
who, unlike them, gave in to their lustful and carnal desires, thereby falling
to the level of beasts [Le Goff 1988]), in the case of the bourgeoisie, the rank-
ing rule would be a transumed form of the first. As such, therefore, it would
come to be based on degrees of selected genetic merit (or eugenics) versus
differential degrees of the dysselected lack of this merit: differential degrees
of, to use the term made famous by The Bell Curve, “dysgenicity.”
It is this new master code, one that would now come to function at all
levels of the social order—including that of class, gender, sexual orientation,
superior/inferior ethnicities, and that of the Investor/Breadwinners versus
the criminalized jobless Poor (Nas’s “black and latino faces”) and Welfare
Moms antithesis, and most totally between the represented-to-be superior
and inferior races and cultures—that would come to function as the dually
status-organizing and integrating principle of U.S. society. So that if, before
the sixties, the enforced segregation of the Black population in the South as
the liminally deviant category of Otherness through whose systemic nega-
tion the former Civil War enemies of North and South, together with the vast
wave of incoming immigrants from Europe, would be enabled to experience
themselves as a We (that is, by means of the shared similarity of their now-
canonized “whiteness”), in addition, their segregated status had served
another central function. This had been that of enabling a U.S. bourgeoisie,
rapidly growing more affluent, to dampen class conflict by inducing their
own working class to see themselves, even where not selected by Evolution
in class terms, as being compensatorily, altruistically bonded with their
dominant middle classes by the fact of their having all been selected by
Evolution in terms of race.
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For this vicarious compensation had been (and still is) urgently neces-
sary, given the degree of psychic devastation wrought on the non-middle-
class groups by the terms of the new degodded redescription of the human
in the context of the Darwinian/Malthusian reformulation of the original
Judeo-Christian formulation. This was so in that in the terms of their new
behavior programming schema, in whose “dysselected by Evolution until
proven otherwise” criterion (i.e., guilty until proven innocent) the individual
could not know if s/he had indeed been so selected except by attaining to
the optimal status of being a middle class Breadwinner and/or successful
Entrepreneur/Investor, to not be middle class was/is to have to accept one’s
ostensible dysselection. This premise had induced in the white, blue-collar
(non-middle) working classes’ status a deeply destructive form of self-
hatred, whose corrosive force could only be assuaged by institutionalized
mechanisms, whether those of the school curricula as noted by Carter G.
Woodson in 1933, or that of outright segregation of (as well as of multiple
other forms of discrimination against) the Black U. S. population group.
Seeing that it was and is only such mechanisms that can enable the white,
blue-collar working classes, as well as the white poor, to experience them-
selves as having been selected, although not in class terms, at least as mem-
bers, together with their bourgeoisie, of the highly selected and thus highly
“deserving” white race. With this being so proved, ostensibly, by the fact of
the empirical dominance and supremacy of whites as a group over all other
nonwhite races and, most totally, over their “racial” anti-type Other, the
Black American—as the group whose Negroid physiognomy and origin con-
tinent/Africa prove them, within the terms of the Darwinian Imaginary, to
belong to the category of humans most totally of all peoples dysselected-by-
Evolution. The bottommost role of Black Americans in the United States is
systemically produced, since it is the ostensible proof of their alleged dysse-
lected “undeservingness” that then functions as the central psychic com-
pensatory mechanism for the white working class, at the same time as this
mechanism induces them to continue to see/experience themselves as also
being, in terms of class, “dysselected by Evolution”—a perception that
induces them to accept their own class-subordinated status, as well as the
hegemony of their middle classes.
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 325

The Negroid physiognomy and its continent of origin, Black Africa,


together with the dark-skinned poorer peoples assimilated to its category
have been made to function within the terms of our present biocentric con-
ception of the human, as well as of its related “formulation of a general order
of existence” (whose postulate of “significant ill” is that of a dual mode of
Natural Scarcity—that is, a scarcity of fully genetically selected human
beings, on the one hand, and of material resources on the other), as the actu-
alized embodiment, no longer of the human made degenerate by sin and
therefore fallen to the status of the apes, but of the human totally dysse-
lected, barely evolved, and as such intermediate between “true” humans and
the primates. As such, the marker of that most totally dysselected-by-
Evolution mode of non-being that each individual and group must strive to
avoid, struggle to prove that they themselves are not, if they are to be.
A parallel and interlinked role is also played by the category of the Poor,
the jobless, the homeless, the “underdeveloped,” all of whom, interned in
their systemically produced poverty and expendability, are now made to
function in the reoccupied place of the Leper of the medieval order and of
the Mad of the monarchical, so as to actualize at the economic level the
same dysgenic or dysselected-by-Evolution conception. With the post-
Sixties’ reordering of society, “Negroid” physiognomy and skin color will be
made to coalesce with the inner city status of poverty and joblessness, crime,
and drugs. They will do so together with those brown Latino faces assimi-
lated to its status as this status, a new Liminal category, enables the incor-
poration of the socially mobile Black middle class into the normative order
of things, if still at a secondary level. The metaphysical dread of this
“Negroid” presence by the “normal” subjects of the order will lead logically
to Nas Escobar’s “taxpayers” being eager to pay for more jails for Black and
Latin faces; eager to see poor women taken off welfare and kept “out of plain
sight.” Since here, again, it is not as men, women, and children that they are
being condemned. It is as “the name of what is evil.”
Here, the dimensions of the fundamental paradox that lies at the core of
the Darwinian answer to the question of who we are (when seen from the
perspective of the goal of unsettling our present coloniality of power, of
being) emerges. The paradox is this: that for the “descriptive statement” that
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defines the human as purely biological being on the model of a natural


organism (thereby projecting it as preexisting the narratively inscribed
“descriptive statement” in whose terms it inscripts itself and is reciprocally
inscripted, as if it were a purely biological being, ontogeny that preexists cul-
ture, sociogeny), it must ensure the functioning of strategic mechanisms
that can repress all knowledge of the fact that its biocentric descriptive
statement is a descriptive statement. Yet that such strategic, Godelier-type
mechanisms of occultation, repressing recognition that our present descrip-
tive statement of the human is a descriptive statement, are able to function
at all (if outside our conscious awareness) is itself directly due to the fact
that, as Terrence W. Deacon points out in his 1997 book The Symbolic Species:
The Co-Evolution of Language and the Brain, humans have been pre-adapted,
primarily through the co-evolution of language and the brain, to be a sym-
bolic and, therefore, a self-representing species.
In consequence, if it was the functioning of these symbolic, representa-
tional, behavior-motivating/demotivating processes as it has to do with the
stigmatizing portrayal of women as intellectually inferior, made by “angry
male professors,” that Virginia Woolf had brilliantly zeroed in on (in her
essay A Room of One’s Own), it was also this same “representational process,”
as expressed in the curriculum and order of knowledge of the United States,
that the Black American educator Carter G. Woodson was to identify in his
1933 Miseducation of the Negro as functioning in a parallel manner as a
behavior-motivating/demotivating mechanism. This, seeing that, as he
pointed out, the curriculum’s systemic canonization/positive marking of all
things European and Euro-American, and no less systemic stigmatization/
negative marking of all things African/Afro-American clearly had an
extracognitive function. This function was one that, by motivating whites
(by representing their ancestors as having done everything worthwhile
doing), and as lawlikely demotivating Blacks (by representing theirs as hav-
ing done nothing), ensured the stable reproduction of the U.S. order that
called for the white population group as a whole to be at the apex of the
social order, and for the Black population group to be at the bottom
(Woodson 1933). With this thereby “verifying,” by its systemic production of
the constant of the 15 percent school achievement gap between white and
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 327

Black students, the selected-by-Evolution status of the one, the dysselected-


by-Evolution nature of the other, and thereby the principle of nonhomo-
geneity that is mapped upon the “space of Otherness” of the Color Line in its
most total white/Black forms. As the line from which the status-ordering
principle, based upon differential degrees of selectedness/dysselectedness
and functioning at all levels of the order, is transformatively generated,
thereby enabling the subjects of our orders to continue to experience it as
the realization of a true, because ostensibly extrahumanly determined, order.
If we see both Woolf ’s and Woodson’s insights as insights into the work-
ings of the symbolic representation processes instituting of our present
genre of the human, Man, and therefore as insights into the necessarily
adaptive truth-for nature of the overall system of knowledge that is enacting
of these processes, then the following linkages can be made. Linkages not
only to Aimé Césaire’s recognition of the same “demotivating” processes at
work in ensuring the subordination of the decolonized in his Discourse on
Colonialism (1960), but also to the multiple challenges mounted during the
sixties—both at the global level by anticolonial activists and by activists in
Europe, and then in the United States by Blacks and a range of other non-
white groups, together with feminists and Gay Liberationists—with all call-
ing in question the systemic nature of their negative markings as nongeneric
or abnormal Others to a series of positively marked generic norms. If this
same overall representation process was to be followed up post-sixties by
Edward Said’s more in-depth elaboration of Césaire’s thesis with respect to
Orientalism, the same linkage can also be made several centuries backward
to Las Casas’s profound challenges to what he called the “slandering” of the
indigenous peoples as a function of the legitimating not only of the expro-
priation of their lands, but also of their expulsion, as “such a large part of
God’s creation,” from human status. Since what joins all of these challenges,
from that of Las Casas to all those of our contemporary order, is, the
Argument proposes, their profound challenge to the overrepresentation of
Man, in both of its variants: to, thereby, the coloniality of being, power, truth,
freedom to which such an overrepresentation leads.
If Fanon, from the standpoint of a “native colonized” and Black Human
Other (i.e., as the standpoint of groups, prohibited—most totally so the lat-
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ter—from realizing themselves as fully human within the terms of our pres-
ent ethnoclass genre of the human), was to put forward the conception of
modes of sociogeny (of each genre-specific governing sociogenic principle,
descriptive statement, or code of symbolic life/death) as a new object of
knowledge, which itself functions in a “space of transculture,” as a space
from which to define the human outside the terms of any one member of the
class of such principles, statements and codes, he had thereby laid the basis
for a fundamental recognition on our part. A recognition in which we can
come to see ourselves as a contemporary, increasingly westernized (in the
terms of Man) population, who, as in the case of all other genre-specific
human populations, inscript and auto-institute ourselves as human through
symbolic, representational processes that have, hitherto, included those
mechanisms of occultation by means of which we have been able to make
opaque to ourselves the fact that we so do. While it was a parallel recogni-
tion that some half a century ago led Aimé Césaire (because coming from
the same standpoint of liminal deviance to our present ethnoclass norm of
being human as did Fanon) to put forward his cognitively emancipatory pro-
posal for a new science able to complete the natural sciences.
The natural sciences (Césaire had argued in a talk given in Haiti, entitled
“Poetry and Knowledge”) are, in spite of all their dazzling triumphs with
respect to knowledge of the natural world, half-starved. They are half-
starved because they remain incapable of giving us any knowledge of our
uniquely human domain, and have had nothing to say to the urgent prob-
lems that beleaguer humankind. Only the elaboration of a new science,
beyond the limits of the natural sciences (he had then proposed), will offer
us our last chance to avoid the large-scale dilemmas that we must now con-
front as a species. This would be a science in which the “study of the Word”—
of our narratively inscribed, governing sociogenic principles, descriptive
statement, or code of symbolic life/death, together with the overall symbolic,
representational processes to which they give rise—will condition the “study
of nature” (Césaire 1946, 1990). The latter as study, therefore (the Argument
proposes), of the neurophysiological circuits/mechanisms of the brain that,
when activated by the semantic system of each such principle/statement,
lead to the specific orders of consciousness or modes of mind in whose
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 329

terms we then come to experience ourselves as this or that genre/mode of


being human. Yet, with this process taking place hitherto outside our con-
scious awareness, and thereby leading us to be governed by the “imagined
ends” or postulates of being, truth, freedom that we lawlikely put and keep
in place, without realizing that it is we ourselves, and not extrahuman enti-
ties, who prescribe them.
In his introduction to Fanon’s Les damnés de la terre (The Wretched of
the Earth), J. P. Sartre zeroed in on the parallel dilemma of “colonized” native
intellectuals who find themselves/ourselves in a situation in which the
Man/Native dichotomy can be seen as an exact parallel of the clergy/laity
dichotomy as it existed towards the end of the Middle Ages. Like the clergy
intellectuals then, now it is the intellectuals of Man who “own the Word,”
while, like the pre-Renaissance lay intellectuals, it is the “native” intellectu-
als (and postcolonially speaking, the intellectuals of the subordinated and
economically impoverished world) who now have only the use of Man’s
Word, who therefore can only “echo.” That is, who must think, write, and pre-
scribe policies, however oppositionally so, in the terms of the very biocen-
tric paradigms that prescribe the subordination and impoverishment of the
vast majority of the worlds to which they/we belong; since paradigms elab-
orated in the very terms of the descriptive statement of the human, in whose
logic the non-Western, nonwhite peoples can only, at best, be assimilated as
honorary humans (as in the case of the “developed” Japanese and other
lighter-skinned Asians) and, at the worst, must (as in the case of Nas’s “black
and 1atino faces”) forcibly be proscribed from human status by means of the
rapidly expanding U.S. prison-industrial system; as itself, a central mecha-
nism of the overall archipelagoes of the poverty-producing institutions of
the Third and Fourth Worlds, archipelagoes that are the major costs paid for
the ongoing production, realization, and reproduction of our present ethn-
oclass genre of the human, of its overrepresentation as if it were isomorphic
with the human, its well being, and notion of freedom, with those that would
have to be brought into existence, were the well-being of the human to be
made into the referent imperative.
If, as Sartre saw so clearly in the case of Fanon, “native” intellectuals had
ceased echoing and had begun opening their mouths for themselves in
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response to a parallel “phase of objectification,” a hardening insulation from


what is human that is increasingly made evident by the ossification of our
present order of knowledge and its biocentric paradigms, so Fanon’s “self-
assertion,” his concentration on finding the lost motives, related no longer
to Man’s but to our human self-interest, was to be effected by means of a
redescription parallel to that by means of which the lay humanists had
invented Man and its Human Others in the reoccupied place of the Christian
genre of the human and its pagan/idolator/Enemies-of-Christ/Christ-
killer/infidel Others. Nevertheless, while these lay humanist intellectuals
had indeed effected a redescriptive statement by means of which they secu-
larized human existence, detaching it from the supernatural agency of the
divine realm, they had done so only by opening the pathway that would
eventually lead, with Darwin, to a new descriptive statement, itself re-
anchored in the no less extrahuman agency of Evolution, thereby reducing
the human within the terms of a biocentric “human sciences” paradigm to
being a “mere mechanism” driven in its behavior by its genetic programs—
and, as such, subject to the processes of natural causation, rather than to the
ontogeny/sociogeny or nature-culture modality of causation, which alone
could enable (as Fanon brilliantly glimpsed) the reflexively self-aversive
behavior of many westernized Black peoples, made into the Other to our
present ethnoclass norm of being human, to repress the genetic instinctual
narcissism defining of all modes of purely organic life. And what Fanon’s new
answer to the question of who/what we are (its revalorizing “descriptive
statement” detached now from any form of extrahuman agency or author-
ship, theocentric or biocentric) enables us to come to grips with is precisely
such a new mode of causation, thereby, with the still-to-be-explained puzzle
of (human) consciousness(es), doing so outside the terms of our present
“Two Culture” order of knowledge and its adaptive “regime of truth” based
on the biocentric disciplinary paradigms in whose terms we at present know
our social reality; this, as the indispensable condition of our continuing to
assume that the mode of being in which we now are (have socialized/
inscripted ourselves to be) is isomorphic with the being of being human
itself, in its multiple self-inscripting, auto-instituting modalities.
Sy lv i a Wy n t e r ● 331

If Césaire called in 1946 for a new science of the Word, a science there-
fore of our dual descriptive statements and thereby of our modes/genres of
being human, doing so from the perspective of a poet—in 1988, the physicist
Hans Pagel would make a parallel call in his 1988 book The Dream of Reason:
The Computer and the Rise of the Sciences of Complexity. His call, too, was
for a new frontier to be opened onto a nonadaptive mode of human self-cog-
nition: onto the possibility, therefore, of our fully realized autonomy of feel-
ings, thoughts, behaviors.
The true leap, Fanon wrote at the end of his Black Skins, White Masks,
consists in introducing invention into existence. The buck stops with us.

NOTES

1. The epigraphs placed at the beginning of select sections are intended to serve as guide-
quotes, or as Heideggerian guideposts (Heidegger 1998), to orient the reader as the
Argument struggles to think/articulate itself outside the terms of the disciplinary dis-
courses of our present epistemological order; seeing that it is these discourses, this
order, that are necessarily—as the condition of our being in the genre/mode of being
human that we now hegemonically are—instituting/inscripting both of the Man of the
Argument’s title, and of its overrepresentation as if it were the human.
2. The series of papers presented/made available by Aníbal Quijano at the 1999 and 2000
conferences held by the Coloniality Working Group at SUNY-Binghamton are central to
the formulations of this Argument (see References).
3. The same holds for the two papers presented by Walter Mignolo at both of these con-
ferences (see References), as well as for his book Local Histories/Global Designs:
Coloniality, Subaltern Knowledges and Border Thinking (2000).
4. The divide is not only economic, but also behavioral. Where the subjects of the techno-
industrial North are hegemonically oriented in their behaviors by the contemporary
secular metaphysics of productivity and profitability, the subjects of the South, while
drawn into the margins as satellite spheres of the techno-industrial North, are still
partly oriented in their behaviors by the largely religious, traditional metaphysics of
reproductivity/fertility that had been instituting of the agrarian revolution. The prob-
lem of the environment, of global warming, etc., is directly due to the convergence of
these two metaphysics and the way in which both continue to impel our collective
behaviors outside of our conscious awareness.
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5. Cited by Frantz Fanon as epigraph to his Peau Noire, Masques Blancs (Black Skins,
White Masks) 1967.
6. Las Casas’s reply to Ginés de Sepúlveda on the occasion of the 1660–61 debate at
Valladolid, Spain, as to whether or not the New World Indians were equally “men” (Las
Casas) or “slaves-by-nature” (Sepúlveda).
7. The Cenú Indians’ reply to the Spaniards’ “local culture” conception of the legitimacy
of the Papal Bull of 1492 as one that “gave” the New World to Spain, as cited by
Greenblatt (1974).
8. In his presentation to the 2000 Conference of the Coloniality Working Group, now
included in this volume, Kelvin Santiago-Valles documented these socio-existential,
political, and commercial-economic processes, even where he represents the latter as
the determinant forces driving the transformation (see References), as distinct from
Kurt Hubner’s concept of an interacting overall system-ensemble transformation
(Hubner 1983), the key to which, the Argument proposes, is the redescription of the
descriptive statement of the public operational identity of Christian as that of Man
overrepresented as the generic human; the redescription also, therefore, of the
Christian Others—i.e., pagan-idolators, infidels, Enemies-of-Christ, as Human Others
(i.e., Indians, Negroes).
9. As Quijano perceptively sees, the contemporary focus on Orientalism that deals with
the stigmatization of Islam, as an alternative imperial monotheistic order to that of the
West, has completely and strategically displaced the far more totally exclusionary sys-
tem of stigmatization placed upon Indians and Negroes (see his Qué tal Raza!).
10. Peter Carlo raises this issue—that of the role of discursive formations in the ongoing
processes of accumulation by which the “proletariats” are produced as rightless and
landless—in his presentation at the 1999 Conference of the Coloniality Working Group
(see References).
11. Ibid.

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